『Sina Nasiri』のカバーアート

Sina Nasiri

Sina Nasiri

著者: Sina Nasiri
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このコンテンツについて

Hi — I’m Sina Nasiri, an SEO strategist & software developer specializing in algorithmic trading and blockchain infrastructure. I co-founded the companies MonoVM, 1Gbits, and VPN.surf, where I architect SEO strategies, build high-performance infrastructure, and develop advanced trading systems.

My Expertise

  • Technical & programmatic SEO: I focus on large-scale programmatic content, entity-based optimization, and Core Web Vitals, specifically in the hosting/VPN niche.
  • Software development: I build full-stack solutions using Laravel (PHP), Node.js, and Python, particularly for Linux/KVM virtualization and high-availability infrastructure.
  • Algorithmic trading: I research and develop quantitative strategies with rigorous back-testing, risk management, and performance analytics (for research only, not investment advice).
  • Blockchain & Web3: I design and implement smart contracts (Solidity), validator node infrastructure, and Web3 tooling for decentralized systems.

What I’m Doing Now I’m focused on scaling our own brands (MonoVM, 1Gbits, VPN.surf) and am not taking on external SEO projects. I’m actively writing and publishing technical content on Medium, and contributing open-source code to improve transparency and community learning.

Why Stack Overflow? I’m here to share practical, real-world insights drawn from infrastructure, trading research, and Web3 development. Whether you’re working on backend systems, trading algorithms, or smart-contract security, I look forward to helping and learning with the community.

エピソード
  • How We Migrated MonoVM to Next.js While Keeping Our Old Stack Alive
    2025/11/02

    The Challenge: Modernizing Without Breaking Millions of URLs

    At MonoVM, we serve hundreds of thousands of monthly visitors across dozens of services — VPS hosting, dedicated servers, domain registration, and more. Over time, our site grew into a complex ecosystem built on PHP and cPanel, with thousands of indexed URLs and deep interlinks accumulated since 2012.

    When we decided to move to a Next.js frontend powered by Kubernetes, we faced a major dilemma:

    How do we modernize our website without losing SEO equity, breaking existing routes, or interrupting customer access to critical tools and legacy pages?

    We needed a solution that would let us migrate gradually, testing and deploying new sections of the site in isolation — without a “big bang” cutover.

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