I like building things that feel slightly over-engineered for no reason other than curiosity.
Most of my work lives somewhere between:
- AI experimentation
- automation systems
- NFC/payment workflows
- developer tooling
- embedded + hardware integrations
- Linux and infrastructure tinkering
Currently exploring how intelligent systems interact with real-world workflows instead of staying trapped inside demos.
β Agentic AI systems
β RPA + workflow automations
β NFC-based transaction systems
β AI + embedded integrations
β Dev tooling and system optimization
β Real-world software architecture| Area | What I Like Building |
|---|---|
| AI/ML | GAN experiments, intelligent workflows, automation agents |
| Systems | Linux environments, tooling, infrastructure, optimization |
| Hardware | NFC systems, sensors, embedded integrations |
| Backend | APIs, automation pipelines, database-backed systems |
| Developer Experience | Productivity tooling, scripting, workflow simplification |
| Experimentation | Trying weird ideas just to see if they break gloriously |
An NFC-powered transaction system designed for controlled real-world usage scenarios.
Focus areas
- Secure NFC workflows
- Role-based admin control
- Authentication systems
- Payment integration architecture
- Java backend logic
Building GAN/TensorFlow-based systems for procedural and AI-assisted art generation.
Exploring
- image synthesis
- model optimization
- GPU workflows
- training pipelines
Experimenting with systems that reduce repetitive digital work using automation agents and workflow orchestration.
Tech includes:
- Selenium
- Puppeteer
- Python automation
- scripting pipelines
Real-time obstacle detection using ultrasonic sensors + servo motion systems.
Built around:
- hardware interaction
- sensor control
- real-time feedback systems
- Agentic AI architectures
- Automation orchestration
- Better system design patterns
- GPU optimization workflows
- Production-grade application structure
Build.
Break.
Refactor.
Repeat.
Average systems work.
Interesting systems evolve.- Linux tweaking at unreasonable hours
- Testing experimental setups on hardware that probably deserves peace
- Turning random ideas into side projects
- Making βsmall improvementsβ that become 6-hour rabbit holes



