From Line 10 to Craft: A Life Built in Iterations
The Binary Playground
It started with the glow of a heavy CRT monitor and the rhythmic clacking of a keyboard. While other kids were mastering sports or instruments, I was busy learning the syntax of a new language. For me, BASIC wasn't just code; it was my first superpower. It taught me that the world was something you could deconstruct, understand, and eventually, rewrite. Those numbered lines of code were the blueprint for how I would eventually see everything else in life.
The Problem Solver
That logical foundation led me naturally into the trenches of tech support. If coding was about building worlds, tech support was about saving them. I became the person who could see the "ghost in the machine," translating complex technical failures into solutions. It was here I realized that technology is only as good as the person’s ability to use it—a lesson that would stay with me forever.
The Shift to the Visual
Eventually, I wanted to see the impact of my work instantly. I transitioned into Graphic Design, trading terminal windows for canvas layers. But even as a designer, I remained a nerd at heart. I didn’t just want things to look "cool"; I wanted them to have internal logic, symmetry, and purpose. When 2D wasn't enough, I stepped into the third dimension. 3D Modeling felt like coming home. It was the perfect marriage of my past lives: the technical precision of a programmer and the aesthetic eye of a designer. I wasn't just drawing anymore; I was sculpting digital reality.
The Current Chapter: Designing for My Tribe Today,
I’ve stepped out of the screen and into the physical world. My passion has culminated in Product Design, but with a very specific focus. I’m not designing for the "average" user. I’m designing for us—the ones who appreciate the click of a mechanical switch, the ergonomics of a well-thought-out tool, and the beauty of a product that respects its user's intelligence. While my technical journey eventually led me to the power and structure of C#, the goal remains the same: creating efficient, beautiful systems—whether they live in a compiler or on a person's desk. I’m building things for the like-minded: the nerds, the makers, and the lifelong learners who have been right there with me since line 10.