Practical Linux, Windows Server and cloud guides for IT pros.

Page

About TurboGeek

TurboGeek is a practitioner-led technical publication built around one idea: useful articles should help you solve real work faster. The site focuses on Linux, Windows Server, AWS, automation, DevOps and modern AI-assisted developer workflows.

The editorial standard is simple: practical first, readable second, hype last.

What Readers Get

  • Step-by-step fixes for Linux, Windows and AWS problems that show up in real environments.
  • Command-focused guides that are built to be used while you work, not admired after the fact.
  • Opinion and analysis pieces where context matters, especially around AI coding tools and platform shifts.
  • Cheat sheets and quick wins for when you need the answer now, not a twenty-minute detour.

How TurboGeek Articles Are Written

Most posts start from a real operational problem, a repeated support task or a tool that deserved a clearer explanation than the official docs provided. The aim is to keep articles specific, testable and direct. Where it helps, posts include version context, command examples, troubleshooting notes and explicit next steps.

TurboGeek now also separates content more clearly by type. Some posts are hands-on guides. Some are explainers. Some are comparisons or reviews. That makes it easier for readers to know what they are getting before they invest time in a page.

Core Content Lanes

About Richard Bailey

Richard Bailey is the founder and writer behind TurboGeek. His background spans Windows Server, Linux, virtualization, cloud infrastructure, scripting, automation and day-two operational support. The site reflects that mix: it is opinionated, practical and heavily shaped by the work that technical teams actually do.

TurboGeek is not trying to be a generic tech news site. It is deliberately narrower than that. The goal is to become a dependable resource for readers who value clear technical writing, working examples and a publication voice that still sounds like someone who has run the command themselves.

Corrections, Contact and Future Updates

If you spot something inaccurate, want to suggest a better approach or need to get in touch about collaboration, use the contact page. TurboGeek is also moving toward a simple reader newsletter so the best new guides and hub pages are easier to follow without relying entirely on search.

Translate »