Not every developer starts with a clear destination. This is where I came from, what drives me now, and where I'm headed.
I didn't grow up around computers — I grew up around problems that needed solving. When I finally got access to a machine that could run code, the connection was immediate. Writing logic that a computer could execute felt like the closest thing to fluency in a new language, and I've been building that fluency ever since. Kenyatta University gave me the formal foundation. Everything else came from staying curious.
Right now my focus is the GardaWorld HRMS — a system built to replace paper-based HR operations at a security firm managing thousands of employees. It's the kind of project that has no shortcuts: it has to be secure, reliable, and it has to work for people who didn't ask for a digital system. That last part — designing for reluctant users — is where I've learned the most about what software actually needs to do.
My specialisation in Cybersecurity isn't a sideline — it shapes how I write every line of production code. I'm not interested in building things that work; I'm interested in building things that work correctly, even under adversarial conditions. The intersection of full-stack development and security is where I intend to stay. Freelance engagements, real problems, Kenyan businesses that deserve software built for them.