Thoughts on software engineering, architecture, and the tools I use to build things.
Trying Arch and Hyprland in college pushed me out of the Windows comfort zone and made me a more capable developer.
A lot of modern FPS games now demand deep system access, and it feels like players are the ones paying the price.
A small Raspberry Pi on my LAN turned into one of the most practical privacy and quality-of-life upgrades in my home network.
This portfolio turned into a real full-stack project with role management, auth, database work, and a lot of small decisions that mattered.
My interest in computer science and my interest in cars feed each other more than people might expect, especially on a complex build.
The most interesting part of the Flipper Zero is not movie-style hacking. It is learning where wireless security is weak and where it actually holds up.
Some of my favorite tech YouTube channels make it easy to keep learning even when I am not sitting down for a formal study session.
The VRChat avatar pipeline looks simple from the outside, but the actual process teaches a lot about 3D workflow and patience.
Lain is one of those rare shows that makes networks, identity, and technology feel interesting without needing to explain everything directly.
Computer science gave me a language for patterns, logic, and curiosity, even when the math side of it pushes me hard.
A compact set of notes on arrays, trees, graphs, dynamic programming, and the patterns that come up over and over again.