Backend engineer focused on building tools that are reliable, fast, and stay out of your way.
I spend most of my time writing Python, occasionally reaching for Go when I need something that ships as a single binary. Big believer in automating the boring stuff.
- Python — primary language, daily driver
- Go — for CLI tools and anything that needs to be portable
- Shell — glue, automation, and general scripting
- Linux — where everything actually runs
- Docker / systemd — deployment and service management
Mostly internal tooling, automation pipelines, and DevOps utilities. The kind of stuff that doesn't get demoed at conferences but makes everyone's day a little less painful.
Current focus: building a CLI tool for managing local dev environments without the overhead of a full orchestration setup.
Digging deeper into Go's concurrency model and exploring some lighter-weight approaches to config management.
Open to conversations about tooling, automation, or backend architecture. Feel free to open an issue or reach out if something here is useful to you.