Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Lowjs.com, whose site name translates as “Low Tech,” is a Chinese personal technology learning blog. According to the information on the site, the blogger goes by Mose and describes himself as a full-stack programmer with a Java-leaning background. The site has an ICP filing from Shandong, its content is publicly available, and it includes an RSS feed. Overall, it is positioned not as a commercial service, but as a place for accumulating personal experience and recording technical issues.
The site mainly offers technical articles, with topics focused on Linux servers, Ubuntu/CentOS operations, Synology NAS, TinyTinyRSS, Antrss, ZeroTier, AdGuard, Fail2Ban, LVM troubleshooting, and hot updates for Java production code. The writing style leans toward “lessons learned from pitfalls”: describing a problem encountered, explaining the symptoms, and then providing commands or configuration-based fixes. For example, in the case of systemd-resolved occupying port 53 on Ubuntu, the article directly provides steps such as disabling the service, modifying resolved.conf, and recreating the resolv.conf link.
The site does not show any paywall, membership system, courses, or consulting services, and the articles are freely accessible. There is also no visible information about ad packages, sponsorships, or commercial partnerships, so it can be regarded as a free personal blog.
The main advantage is that the content feels authentic and comes from the author’s own hands-on experience, rather than being vague like many copy-and-paste tutorials. For users encountering similar issues, it may help them quickly find relevant commands and troubleshooting ideas. The writing is straightforward and easy to read, making it suitable for Chinese-speaking technical users who need quick reference material.
The shortcomings are also fairly obvious: the crawled content shows only about 28 articles across the whole site, so the scale is small. The article organization feels more like casual notes, lacking structured series, explanations of version differences, and risk warnings. Some non-technical content, such as price comparisons for health supplements, is mixed into the site, so the thematic consistency is average. As a personal blog, it also does not provide formal customer support, an SLA, or any commitment to ongoing maintenance.
It is suitable for Linux operations beginners, NAS hobbyists, and Java backend developers who need a reference when encountering specific errors. It is also a good fit for people who like subscribing to personal tech blogs. It is not suitable for users who want to systematically learn Linux, Java, or NAS deployment, nor is it appropriate for enterprises to rely on as an official operations standard.
The site has domestic ICP filing information, and the content also mentions that it “provides acceleration services,” so it is likely directly accessible from mainland China. Overall, it is a small but practical Chinese personal technology blog whose value lies in supplementary experience for specific problems, rather than serving as a complete technical knowledge base.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on lowjs.com official site.
lowjs.com is an China content_blog provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach lowjs.com directly.