Apps and utilities built specifically for indie founders and small teams.
Daily and weekly project updates, progress logs, and lessons learned from shipping products.
Technical guides, founder insights, and lessons from building products.
Curated tools, books, and resources that have helped me build better.
Shipped Tools
— A Builder Who Actually Delivers
Every app here started as a problem I hit while building something else. The list keeps growing.
Each tool was built to solve something specific. None of them are finished — they're iterated on based on real feedback from real users. That's the point. Shipped and improving > launched.
Why I'm Building in Public
— Honest answer
I'm new to this whole "build in public" thing. I don't use social media. At least on the consumer end. But I figured this could be a good way to connect with other builders, get feedback on what I'm making, and find early testers.
Now that I've shipped my main product, I'm having fun building smaller tools and documenting the process. No fluff, no engagement farming — just what I'm working on and what I'm learning.
Here's what's active right now:
T-Shaped Founder Website
Well... I needed a place where I can post content, share live builds and host a community. I was going to go with Ghost initially, but turns out I'm too cheap and I figured over time my specs for this site might change so I wanted to keep it flexible.
Follow progressLooking for alpha testers. If you're a founder dealing with runway anxiety or marketing chaos, I'd love your feedback. Seriously — it helps me build something actually useful.
Blog
— Writing to learn
I write about stuff that interests me — it helps solidify what I'm learning. Maybe you'll find something useful too.
No posts yet — check back soon.
Resources I Like
— Stuff that helped me
Things I've found useful along the way. No affiliate links, no sponsorships — just stuff I actually use or learned from.
1.5 Years Ago I Was Following a Tutorial.
Last Month I Shipped a Complex SaaS Product.
I started learning to code around 1.5 years ago through The Odin Project — the traditional path, writing everything manually, learning syntax line by line. Then AI coding tools started getting genuinely powerful, and everything changed.
I made a decision: stop trying to become a master of syntax, and start learning how to design and build systems. Architecture. Product thinking. AI-assisted workflows. That pivot changed everything.
Since then I've been grinding — shipped multiple tools, built a complex marketing SaaS from scratch, ran dozens of experiments. Now I feel like I've got a solid grasp on these tools and I'm ready to build in public and connect with other builders, founders, and entrepreneurs.
I'm not a developer with decades of experience — my path here was chaotic. I've always liked learning and building stuff, and throughout my career I've worked in marketing, product, project management, design — basically covering most bases before finally learning to code and ship my own products.