Johann Darby is the IT administrator, technical writer, and author behind Localis. He works in Marysville, Washington, and has spent his career inside large to small IT shops. The handbook is written for people like him, with a focus on service desk through architecture, modernization through compliance, grounded method through experience. Localis was founded as the publishing and advisory home for that work.
Outside the handbook, Johann writes the Vagabond Life trilogy — science fiction published under the same name. Long-form writing in two registers, technical and narrative, has shaped the prose discipline which the handbook applies.
The modern IT administrator faces a landscape that existing playbooks were not written for. AI infrastructure, cloud governance, compliance overhead, and vendor lock-in decisions arrive faster than the industry can document them.
Localis exists to close that gap — with a working reference, practical instruments, and direct advisory access for the organizations that need it.

Responsible for compute, cloud, and governance decisions in organizations where AI is already a reality.

Organizations that depend on good infrastructure decisions but do not have a dedicated enterprise IT team.

Leaders evaluating hyperscalers, AI platforms, and compliance frameworks who need honest, ranked analysis.

Practitioners advising clients on AI readiness, infrastructure modernization, and governance posture.
Each part of Localis was built to serve a specific need — and they reinforce each other. The handbook is the foundation. The tools make it operational. The advisory makes it applied.

Written by someone who has worked inside the infrastructure, not observed it. Every framework, index, and recommendation is tested against real decisions.

The Hyperscaler Best-Fit indices include a cost honesty dimension because vendor-provided comparisons are not neutral. Neither is Localis — but its bias is toward the administrator's outcome, not the vendor's revenue.

The tools open in a browser and extend directly into the job. They are not presentations about the work — they are instruments for doing it.

Enterprise IT has no shortage of consultants and frameworks. The small and mid-size organization — two to two hundred people — is underserved. That is the primary Localis audience.

Localis, the handbook, and the author share a visual identity and a point of view. What you read here and what you read at thevagabondlife.com are the same person, the same work.