The story
I build because the world isn't designed well enough yet.
Developer, accessibility innovator, TEDx speaker, JCI TOYP 2020 honoree, and a person living with SMA. This is how lived experience became a product lab.

- 01
Who I am
I'm a developer and founder who designs and ships accessible software, assistive hardware, and AI-powered tools. I work from a simple belief: good technology should adapt to people, not the other way around.
- 02
Living with SMA
I live with spinal muscular atrophy. It shapes how I move through the day — and it taught me exactly where everyday products quietly assume a body they were never going to have.
- 03
Why technology became my window
Technology gave me work, communication, learning, and independence. A laptop and a phone became the difference between waiting for help and doing things myself.
- 04
From personal need to public tools
Most of what I build started as a problem I had first. Once a tool worked for me, I realized thousands of people hit the same wall — so I shared it, made it free where I could, and kept iterating.
- 05
Tavanito, Hamito, Ersalito
I founded social-impact projects to put accessibility and opportunity into more hands. They proved that practical tools, not slogans, are what actually change someone's day.
- 06
Rebuilding in the US
Moving to the United States meant rebuilding my independence in a new country — new systems, new tools, same mission. Not a tragedy; a fresh runway.
- 07
AI and the future
AI is the most powerful accessibility layer I've ever had. It lets one person research, design, and ship at a pace that used to need a team — and it's only getting better.
What I build on
Personal values
Independence
Tools should reduce how often you have to ask for help.
Honesty
Real status, real numbers, no inspiration-washing.
Respect
Design for the person, not the diagnosis.
Learning
Ship, listen, fix. Repeat in public.
Problem solving
Start from the barrier, work back to the build.
Impact
Free or affordable wherever it can be.