These days I'm splitting my time between building things and working with clients. I've got a few of my own projects in motion, and I take on consulting and advising work for companies wrestling with AI implementation, legacy systems, and the technical debt that piles up around both. I help them cut through the noise and build solutions that actually work. I also continue to serve as CTO and advisor for Lybbie, a wearable health-tech company solving the kind of hardware-meets-data-meets-UX problems I love. It's the intersection of everything I've learned over two decades: architecture, leadership, and pragmatic problem-solving.
Outside of work, most of my energy goes to my family, time at home, travel when we can swing it, the everyday stuff that matters most. I also hit deathcore shows whenever I can. There's something satisfying about spending the week on careful technical work and then standing in a room with absolute chaos at maximum volume.