About

A builder narrative, not a resume page.

I am a student developer with a strong interest in practical systems, Linux ecosystems, open-source tooling, and calm, readable engineering.

Introduction

I have been curious about technology for as long as I can remember. Growing up, I spent a lot of time experimenting with devices, operating systems, and software. What interested me most was understanding how things worked behind the scenes, not just using technology, but figuring out how it was built.

Who Am I?

I am a student developer focused on practical systems and open-source tooling. I enjoy working inside the Linux ecosystem and I like software that feels understandable, repairable, and useful.

Most of my work starts with a real workflow problem: something repetitive, fragile, slow, or hard to maintain. I try to turn that into a small system that is easier to reason about.

How It Started?

My technical journey began with curiosity and experimentation. Trying different tools led me toward open source, where I learned by reading real projects, breaking things carefully, and building small utilities until the patterns started to make sense.

That is also where FOSS began to matter to me. It made software feel less like a sealed product and more like a shared space where people can learn, improve, and contribute.

What I Do?

I build tools, automation systems, frontend interfaces, Telegram bots and userbots, and workflow-focused utilities. I also spend time customizing environments, especially Linux setups, because a good working environment changes how quickly ideas become real.

Why I Started?

I started because I wanted to solve small problems for myself and understand the systems I used every day. That practical curiosity is still the center of how I learn: build something, inspect the rough edges, improve the structure, then repeat.

What I My hilosophy?

Usefulness over hype. Clarity over noise. I like systems thinking, boring reliability, readable interfaces, and engineering choices that make a project easier to maintain after the first version is done.

Tech Stack

Languages

Python TypeScript JavaScript Java Bash

Frontend

React Next.js HTML CSS

Backend

FastAPI Flask Node.js PostgreSQL MongoDB SQLite Redis

Linux / FOSS

Linux Hyprland FOSS Open Source

Tooling

Git Docker Cloudflare AWS Vercel

Design

Readable UI Systems Thinking Editorial Layouts