investr.info
An AI-powered stock research tool. Started as StockLens, got rebuilt from the ground up after V1 had shaky data from Yahoo and Twelve Data and didn't look the way I wanted. V2 cross-checks every figure and ships as investr.info.

Five things I've been working on, ordered roughly by how recently I started. Each has its own page with more detail.
An AI-powered stock research tool. Started as StockLens, got rebuilt from the ground up after V1 had shaky data from Yahoo and Twelve Data and didn't look the way I wanted. V2 cross-checks every figure and ships as investr.info.

Started a clothing brand from scratch. Sourced a manufacturer in India, went back and forth on samples, and figured out production. Ran the @noirexclothing Instagram myself. Designed the posts, wrote the copy, timed the launch. The first post hit 1,000+ followers without spending anything on ads. Learned a lot about how long the gap is between an idea and something you can actually hold.

Built four computers from scratch. Started with my own during lockdown, using forums and spec sheets and a lot of trial and error. Now I build for friends when they ask. I like that there's no ambiguity in it. Either the machine posts or it doesn't. You can't fake your way through a POST screen.
I've been spending time actually understanding how AI works, not just using it. That means digging into quantization, how parameters and datasets shape a model's behavior, why hallucinations happen, and what embeddings are doing under the hood. I've run models locally and been building toward an AI workstation setup capable of handling it properly. On the tooling side, I work daily with Claude Code and have used OpenAI's Codex and Google's Antigravity. Using these tools to build real things, and understanding what's happening inside them, feels like two sides of the same skill.

Six seasons in Verbier, Level 8 certified. Interned at Les Elfes International in Dec 2025 – Jan 2026, working with campers from around the world on the mountain. Skiing is the thing I've done consistently the longest, since before I was building anything else. The mountain teaches you to read conditions and your own limits.
