Logbook
A running log of things I've shipped and the thinking around them. New entries arrive as projects mature.
A ~6MB model, ~30ms inference, real-time object detection inside a browser tab. WebGPU and the lightweight YOLO generation have quietly moved the starting question for computer vision projects.
A side project that turns scans, photos, and handwritten notes into interactive web pages. Layout, diagrams, equations, and the small marks in the margin are rebuilt instead of just transcribed.
If your strategy for the 2026 software market is more applications, you are competing where the conversion rate is the lowest. The way out is not more applications. It is everything around them.
A small web app for budgeting and tracking monthly money without friction. Type your income, pick your state, list your expenses and debt, and see what is actually left. No signup. No backend. Built because the alternatives felt like a second job.
Three years out of school, the part of the degree that has held up the most is the part nobody listed in the syllabus. CS is mostly a permission slip into other people's worlds, and that turns out to be the whole point.
Two months of building, one final commit, and a free N-400 naturalization wizard about to go live. A short note on what MigrateEasy is, who it is for, and why the form-filling part is free.
48 hours. Five specialized AI agents. One platform for non-technical founders who want a website without learning prompt engineering. Built at Hornet Hacks 3.0 and trialed live with seven Sacramento small business owners.
An AI-powered academic advisor that reads a transcript PDF in the browser and turns it into live GPA, requirement progress, and a real recommendation for next semester. No degree audit appointment required.