Canonical pillar
Frontier canonical guide
Frontier is the canonical Hax hub for this subject. It is not a tag archive: it explains the whole topic first, then routes readers to narrower cluster pages for the exact job they are trying to finish. Start here when you need the map: what the category means, which parts are mature enough to use, where local AI still breaks, and which Hax tests support the recommendation.
The cluster is organized so authority concentrates on this page instead of being split across near-duplicate articles. Broad questions stay on the pillar; specific intents move to cluster pages such as measured benchmarks, setup guides, comparisons, operational retrospectives, and concept explainers. Each cluster page links back to this pillar through its topic breadcrumb and kicker, while this pillar links out with descriptive anchors. That bidirectional structure helps crawlers and readers see one coherent body of work rather than a loose feed.
For Frontier, the useful reading order is simple: read this summary to get the decision frame, scan the section that matches your intent, then open the deepest article for measurements, source links, and caveats. Current cluster coverage includes 3 published Hax posts including Mini PC and Raspberry Pi AI: The 2026 Landscape and Picks, Mini PC and Raspberry Pi AI: A 5-Minute Beginner Guide, Mini PC and Raspberry Pi AI: Small Models Fly, 7B Needs an Accelerator. Thin overlap is treated as consolidation fuel: when several posts chase the same question, the stronger URL acts as the authority center and supporting pages point back into the same canonical path.