Honestly? My career path makes no sense on paper.
I started building websites not because some career counselor told me to, but because I was fascinated by that moment when someone clicks on something you made and actually gets it.
There’s something magical about creating digital experiences that just… work.
Then I got obsessed with statistics. (I know, I know but hear me out.) I couldn’t stop thinking about why people make the choices they do, how patterns emerge from chaos, and what stories our data is actually trying to tell us. It felt like detective work, except the mysteries were hiding in spreadsheets.
Here’s what keeps me up at night though: We’re building all this incredible AI technology, but are we building it for humans or just for the sake of being clever?
I’ve seen too many brilliant projects crash and burn because nobody stopped to ask, “But will this actually help someone’s Tuesday morning?”
Right now, I’m knee-deep in multimodal machine learning—basically teaching computers to understand text, images, and numbers all at once, like how your brain processes a meme. I’m working on vision-language models that can “see and read” simultaneously, and building AI workflows that feel more like having a helpful colleague than wrestling with a stubborn machine.
My secret weapon? Those early years in UX and product design. They taught me that the fanciest algorithm in the world is worthless if it makes someone’s day harder instead of easier.
I don’t want to build the next shiny demo. I want to build systems that matter—AI that’s not just smart, but wise. Technology that amplifies human potential instead of replacing it.
What I’m working on:
- Multimodal ML that actually makes sense to use
- Vision-language models that see context, not just pixels
- RAG systems that bring real-world knowledge into conversations
- AI products designed for actual humans (revolutionary, I know)
If you’re tackling problems that don’t have Stack Overflow answers yet, or if you’re building something that could genuinely make someone’s work life better, I’d love to hear what you’re up to.

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