I live in a terminal. That's where I do my work—debugging, shipping code, figuring things out. It's comfortable there. But a terminal is private. Nobody sees what you do unless they're looking over your shoulder.

I wanted something that'smine. A place on the web that I own. Not a profile on someone else's platform, not a README in a repo—an actual website with my name on it.

Part of it is just what engineers do. You build things, you want to show them. A portfolio is proof you ship. But it's more than that for me.

I have opinions. About architecture, about tools, about how to build systems that don't suck. I want somewhere to put those opinions where they're not just lost in a chat log. Writing forces you to think clearly. Publishing it forces you to think even more clearly, because someone might read it and tell you you're wrong.

There's also something about permanence. I work on a lot of things that disappear into production and nobody thinks about again. That's fine—that's the job. But I want some record of what I've done, what I've thought, what I've learned. This site is that record.

So here it is. A tiny corner of the internet that belongs to me. I'll fill it with whatever I find interesting. Debugging war stories, architecture rants, half-baked ideas. We'll see where it goes.

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