I love building cool stuff with cool people.
I started in data and never really left. I just kept trading up for bigger problems to solve, which pulled me from SQL and dashboards into Python and machine learning, and eventually into a seat where I had a say in what we built and who we brought in to ship it. These days I'm teaching myself the new frontier, how to actually work with AI, agents, and the workflows around them, and putting every bit of it to use, at work and in the projects I build on the side. AI is a great equalizer: it knocked down the wall between having an idea and actually shipping it.
Lately that same curiosity has me poking under the hood, into how systems scale and stay secure, learning each new piece as the work demands it. The constant across all of it: build things people love, not just things that work.
I'm an introvert who learned to love a full room of people. When I'm not building, you'll find me on a trail, in a video game, watching anime, or lost in a book. I also take food and coffee far too seriously. And I'll happily talk your ear off about any of it.
Beyond the day job, the ideas I happily fall down rabbit holes on, the ones that genuinely bring me joy.
Side projects I make on my own time, usually to learn something new, or just for the fun of it.
An ongoing exploration of how agentic systems can reason about markets, weigh ideas, and act with a human in the loop. Mostly an excuse to learn how autonomous agents actually behave when the stakes feel real.
An AI app for people who take food too seriously (guilty). It learns your palate, the cuisines, flavors, and vibe you actually go for, turns it into a food personality, then points you to restaurants worth your time.
A playful web app that turns a close-up of your dog's snout into one-of-a-kind art, reading the unique ridges of their nose and rendering it in styles from vibrant to surreal to line art. Dheera was the first model.
The wall between having an idea and shipping it just came down. What it was hiding is the whole game.