About

Who I am — explorer, engineer, music nerd, and perpetual student of technology.

Published January 13, 2024

About Me

I am a technologist, explorer, and lifelong learner (a sysya). I have been around computers long enough to remember when the web was a genuinely weird and exciting experiment — when hand-crafting an HTML page felt like casting a spell, and getting a Perl script to actually run on a LAMP stack was a small personal triumph. That sense of wonder, thankfully, never left.


The Technology Story

I have watched technology grow up in real time. From HCL Beanstalk desktops humming in the corner to the Pentium era, the Celeron machines that were honestly good enough for most things, and the endless wave of change that followed — I have lived through most of it.

HTML was the first thing that truly hooked me. There was something almost magical about it in the dial-up internet world, where everything was a html page — writing a few lines of markup and watching it render into something a browser could show another human being. Then came Perl, then PHP, then the full LAMP stack — Apache, MySQL, PHP, Linux underneath it all. That was where the serious building started.

Java and JavaScript became my comfort zone for a long stretch. Two very different beasts, but both deeply rewarding in their own way — Java for the discipline it enforces and the architecture it demands, JavaScript for the chaos it embraces and somehow still ships in. I have spent more hours than I would like to admit debugging async issues in both.

More recently I have been finding my feet with Python. Late to the party, I know. But there is something genuinely enjoyable about how fast you can go from a half-formed idea to a working script. It suits the way I think when I am experimenting.

And then there is virtualisation — possibly the thing in technology I love most. The idea that you can spin up entire machines, entire stacks, entire environments in seconds and discard them cleanly when you are done is still remarkable to me. Homelabs, hypervisors, containers — I have lost many very happy weekends to all of them.


Life Beyond the Screen

Technology is only part of the story.

I have spent a significant portion of my life outdoors — hiking, exploring, navigating places with no signal and no agenda. There is a clarity you find on a trail or at altitude that is hard to replicate anywhere else. It keeps the perspective honest. Problems that felt enormous at a desk look very different on a mountain.

Music is the other constant. More specifically, music technology — that perfect intersection of engineering, creativity, and raw feeling. Whether it is understanding synthesis, tracing a signal chain, or simply wondering why a particular recording sounds the way it does, I will always follow that rabbit hole wherever it leads.


What This Site Is

This is my digital notebook. A place to write down what I am learning, document what I am building, and think out loud about things that interest me.

It is not a polished publication. It is honest work — occasionally incomplete, always a work in progress. If something here is useful to you, I am genuinely glad. If something is wrong, please let me know.

Every individual is a student of existence, constantly shaped by environment, curiosity, and the world pushing back. Life is a continuous process of learning and transformation. So is this site.

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