14 years of building distributed systems that don't break at 3 AM
Building in the agentic era. Less typing, same shipping.
Backend engineer, 14 years of Java, TypeScript, and Python. I build distributed systems for work and autonomous agents after hours. My side project writes its own code. You send it a WhatsApp message describing a bug, walk away, and come back to a pull request with tests passing. Not by typing faster, but by rethinking what "building software" means. Clean architecture, agentic development, and helping engineers grow. That's what I care about.
Most of my career looked the way careers do. Java backends at startups. Teams of six to ten. Spring, Kafka, MongoDB, three clouds. Leading engineers, keeping systems running while org charts reshuffled around us.
After hours, I'm building IntexuraOS. An autonomous agent platform where AI agents design, code, test, and ship. The software that builds itself. Multi-model research, voice-first interface through WhatsApp, enterprise-grade engineering on a budget that would make your CFO cry.
There's a book called "Extreme Ownership." I took it literally. If the code broke, I own it. If requirements were unclear, I should have asked. If the deadline slipped, I underestimated. The tool doesn't take ownership. I do.
When I'm not building distributed systems, you'll find me in the mountains or on the court. I believe the best thinking happens away from the keyboard.
I'm always interested in hard problems with real users. If you're building something that matters, let's connect.