So I wanted to check out Kyle Ferrie’s stuff. Real talk, I couldn’t find squat at first. Pounded my keyboard, Googled every combo I could think of. Nothin’ popped up that felt legit.

Social Media Rabbit Hole
Hopped over to social media next. Scrolled Twitter, clicked through profiles with his name. Buncha dead ends and fake accounts. Found one dude postin’ tech stuff that looked promising. Turned out he just reposted old news—zero original content.
- Wasted an hour scrolling feeds
- Clicked twenty profiles easy
- Got blocked by some rando who thought I was spam
Forum Deep Dive
Switched gears to techie forums. Dug through Reddit threads, Quora answers—even checked obscure Discord servers. Finally stumbled on a thread tucked away in some subreddit about embedded systems. Bingo. Dude had actually shared his GitHub. Felt like finding gold after mining rocks.
Actual Goldmine
The GitHub page? Packed. Not just code. Tutorials, troubleshooting docs, even PDF guides for newbies. Saved everything to my drive like a squirrel with nuts.
- Downloaded three walkthroughs
- Bookmarked the repo
- Copied code snippets into my own project
Putting It All Together
Threw Kyle’s PWM controller code into my gadget prototype yesterday. Didn’t work—shocker. Traced his notes line by line. Totally missed one config setting. Fixed it, uploaded firmware. Suddenly my hardware didn’t sound like a dying cat. Actually purred. Spent today stress-testing it. So far? Solid. Cheers Kyle—whoever you are.