CryptoSlug Operations Center – turn your setup into a control tower

in #exposure28 days ago

The CryptoSlug Operations Center is a static dashboard that shows, in one place, how your crypto setup is really running: Spot, Futures, Earn, bots and infra.

👉 Live dashboard: CryptoSlug Operations Center
https://cryptoslug.pt/en/centro_op_slug.html

👉 Full long-form guide on the War Log:
https://cryptoslug.pt/en/blog/operations-center.html

What is it?

Think of it as a control tower for your setup:

Exposure map – how your capital is split between Spot, Futures and Earn.

Active bots – which bots are running, what strategies they use and how complex they are.

Telemetry – cycle time between pairs, API rate limits, engine status.

Infrastructure – where everything runs (VPS + local PC).

Next upgrades – a simple list of what needs work next.

No live clicks, no noise – just a static snapshot of Cryptoslug setup that you can review as a starting point.

Why it matters

Crypto trades 24/7. Without a clear view, it’s easy to:

Add too much leverage in Futures.

Forget how much you have locked in Earn.

Lose track of how many bots and pairs you’re running.

Ignore infra limits (weak VPS, no separation between test and prod, etc.).

The Operations Center fixes that by forcing you to answer three questions:

Is my exposure aligned with my risk profile?

Do I really need this many bots and pairs?

Can my infra handle one more bot without breaking?

If any answer is “I don’t know”, the dashboard will make it obvious.

What the dashboard shows (quick tour)

  1. Spot / Futures / Earn donuts
    Three coloured donuts show how the capital is distributed:

Spot = core coins, no leverage.

Futures = leveraged positions (with long vs short split).

Earn = flexible, locked and staking products that act as a “volatility airbag”.

If Futures grows too big or stablecoin reserves start shrinking, you’ll see it here first.

  1. Bot stack & difficulty

A small stack view explains:

Which licence and Gunbot version is running.

Which strategies you use for Spot and Futures.

Difficulty level (1–5) per bot – from basic to aggressive.

This helps you avoid running “expert mode” bots on a beginner risk profile.

  1. Monitoring & infra

This section reminds you of the basic toolkit:

Gunbot Monitor – web dashboard on your PC/VPS for bots, pairs and PnL.

Gunbot App – quick check on mobile when you’re away from the PC.

A simple “signal vs noise” bar shows whether we are drowning in alerts or flying blind.

Infra is split into:

Main VPS (production).

Local PC (tests, upgrades, tools).

The idea: prod vs lab, not “everything on the same shaky machine”.

  1. Layers & upgrades

Three progress bars track:

Bots & strategies.

Monitoring & alerts.

Infrastructure & VPS.

Below, a short upgrade list: add/remove bots, adjust VPS specs, clean up pairs, improve monitoring.
It’s basically a Ops to-do list.

How to actually use it
Open the live dashboard
https://cryptoslug.pt/en/centro_op_slug.html

Ask three simple questions

Is my Spot/Futures/Earn split what I want?

Are my bots and strategies at the right difficulty for my level?

Is my infra ready for the next step?

Write down one change

Cut a bot.

Adjust a pair list.

Upgrade or clean your VPS.

Increase (or decrease) your Earn/hedge.

Small, consistent tweaks beat big emotional changes.

Want the full tactical breakdown?
If you want the long version with all sections explained in detail, check the full article on the CryptoSlug War Log:

📖 CryptoSlug Operations Center: a complete tactical overview
https://cryptoslug.pt/en/blog/operations-center.html

More on cryptoslug.pt — Gunbot strategies, automation & discipline.
centro.png

Capture.PNG

Capture1.PNG

Main Title

01. Sub Title

This is the most basic template for beginners using markdown for the first time. By simply editing the text between the check emojis, anyone can create great blog content as if using an editor.

Use an asterisk mark to provide emphasis, such as italics or bold.

Create lists with a dash:

  • Item 01
  • Item 02
  • Item 03
Use back ticks
to create a block of code

Main Title

01. Sub Title

This is the most basic template for beginners using markdown for the first time. By simply editing the text between the check emojis, anyone can create great blog content as if using an editor.

Use an asterisk mark to provide emphasis, such as italics or bold.

Create lists with a dash:

  • Item 01
  • Item 02
  • Item 03
Use back ticks
to create a block of code