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Terms of Use

Last updated · July 2026

equalnorth.dev is the personal site of Edward Quigley, published under the name Equal North. By visiting or using this site, you're agreeing to the following, plainly stated.

What this is (and isn't)

Equal North is a personal research studio and public workbench — not a company, and nothing on this site is offered for sale or hire. Where a project has grown into its own real product with its own site — currently PanelFlow — that product is governed by its own terms, not this page.

Content, "as is"

Everything here — write-ups, project descriptions, build logs, code snippets — is provided as is, without warranty of any kind, express or implied. Projects described as concepts, in development, or shelved are exactly that: works in progress or abandoned experiments, not commitments or promises about what will ship, when, or in what form.

Intellectual property

The Equal North name, the compass/star mark, and the text and design of this site are © Edward Quigley. You're welcome to link to this site or quote it with attribution. Please don't reproduce the branding or wholesale copy the design as your own.

Third-party links

Links to LinkedIn, Instagram, PanelFlow, and anywhere else off equalnorth.dev lead to services this site doesn't control. We aren't responsible for their content, availability, or how they handle your data — see our Privacy Policy for what we're responsible for, and check each external site's own policies for the rest.

No liability

To the fullest extent permitted by law, Edward Quigley and Equal North aren't liable for any damages or losses arising from your use of, or inability to use, this site — this is a personal, non-commercial project, run and maintained by one person on their own time.

Changes

These terms may be updated as the site changes. The "last updated" date above reflects the most recent revision.

Contact

Questions about these terms can go to [email protected].

Not legal advice. These terms are written in plain language for a small personal site, in good faith. They aren't a substitute for professional legal counsel, particularly if you're relying on them for anything beyond casually browsing a hobby project.