One person. One mission. A lot of hardware.
IronLabs Tech was born from a single obsession: why doesn't a device like this already exist?
Not a phone. Not a laptop. Something in between — a handheld, pocket-sized machine that feels genuinely cyberpunk. One that plays music in true Hi-Res audio, runs ethical hacking tools, and fits in your jacket pocket like it was always meant to be there. A device that gives you that feeling of carrying something from the future.
ByteWave MK.I is that device. Powered by Raspberry Pi, built by one person, designed from the ground up — a full-fledged handheld capable of Hi-Res audio playback and ethical hacking. The device I wanted to carry, so I built it.
ByteWave MK.I is just the beginning. The roadmap goes further — a lot further.
The IronLabs Tech ecosystem is being built piece by piece: IronCell MK1 (AI-powered powerbank), a Mark II series pushing the hardware even further, headphones integrated with masks carrying real sensors, and retractable masks if the engineering holds up. Every product carries the same philosophy — functional, cyberpunk, built for people who want something different.
There's still a lot to come. This is only the start.
The end goal of IronLabs is not a music player. It's something much bigger.
The vision is affordable exosuits — real, wearable exoskeletons built for the people who need them most. Workers in sectors that destroy their bodies carrying heavy loads every day. Elderly people who just want to walk like they used to. Not luxury tech for labs and hospitals — affordable hardware for real people.
That's a long road ahead. But every product built before it — ByteWave, the ecosystem, all of it — is a step toward the engineering, the funding, and the knowledge it takes to get there.
IronLabs Tech is a solo operation. Every line of code, every circuit, every design decision — one person.