Welcome to my personal blog where I share thoughts on technology, programming, and life.
A Place to Breathe and Reflect
This blog is my attempt to create a place where thoughts can breathe. Over the years, I have realized that ideas fade quickly if they are not captured, and experiences lose their weight if they are not reflected upon. Writing, for me, is not only a way to communicate but also a way to think—an invitation to slow down in a world that moves too fast.
Lessons from Building Software
As an engineer, I spend much of my time in the practical trenches of technology. I write code, design systems, and wrestle with the trade-offs between performance, simplicity, and scalability. Projects like Delong, and earlier ones such as Papyrus, have taught me that building software is never just about tools or frameworks—it is about clarity of vision, the courage to make decisions, and the humility to revisit them when reality proves otherwise.
Exploring Interests and Frontiers
My interests are broad, sometimes too broad for my own good. I enjoy diving deep into web development, exploring the elegance of React and Next.js, the type safety of TypeScript, and the art of crafting user experiences that feel seamless. At the same time, I am fascinated by the frontier of blockchain and Web3. Beyond the specifics of any technology, I care about the timeless principles of software engineering: clean abstractions, resilient architectures, and the ways in which good tools empower people.
Beyond Code, Towards Life
But this blog will not be limited to code. I believe every engineer is also a human being, and behind every technical decision lies a personal story. Sometimes I will write about the rhythm of learning, the doubts that come with tackling new fields, or the balance between work and life. Other times, I may simply record passing reflections on how technology is changing the world around us—how it reshapes communities, economies, and even our sense of meaning.
An Invitation to Connect
So, welcome. This is a place for notes, experiments, and reflections—sometimes technical, sometimes philosophical, always personal. Thank you for visiting, and I hope the time you spend here leaves you with something worth carrying into your own path.