About
The story so far.
A tech entrepreneur who believes in building things that matter. Here's the longer version.
My story
I got my start in tech the way a lot of people do — by breaking things and figuring out how to put them back together. As a teenager, I was fascinated by how websites worked. I'd view source on every page I visited, trying to understand the magic behind the screen.
That curiosity led me to teach myself programming. I built terrible websites at first — everyone does. But with each project, I learned something new. HTML became CSS became JavaScript became backend development became system design. The rabbit hole had no bottom, and I loved it.
"The best way to predict the future is to build it."
Over the years, I've worked at agencies, consultancies, and startups. Each environment taught me something different — agencies taught me speed, consultancies taught me adaptability, and startups taught me that building a product is about so much more than code.
Today, I'm focused on building my own products. I believe that the best software comes from small, opinionated teams that care deeply about the problems they're solving. That's the kind of company I'm building, and it's the kind of work I find most fulfilling.
What I believe
Build in the open
Transparency builds trust. I share my work, my process, and my mistakes because that's how we all get better.
Simplicity over cleverness
The best solutions are the ones that are easy to understand, maintain, and extend. Cleverness impresses; simplicity ships.
People over technology
Technology is a tool. The goal is always to make life better for the people who use what we build.
Long-term thinking
Quick wins are fine, but real impact comes from sustained effort. I invest in foundations that compound over time.
Moments

Exploring

Building

Speaking

Traveling

Creating
Right now
Working on: An early-stage startup that I'm not ready to talk about publicly yet. It involves making a part of the developer experience significantly better.
Reading: A mix of technical books and business biographies. Currently working through "The Hard Thing About Hard Things" for the third time.
Into: SvelteKit, edge computing, local-first software, and the resurgence of personal websites. Also spending more time outdoors — turns out screens aren't everything.