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Welcome. You've reached the digital node of csmit195.
If you're reading this, you've navigated past the landing page and into the core of my documentation. This site isn't just a static resume; it's a reflection of how I see the world—a blend of structured data, neon-soaked aesthetics, and the relentless pursuit of automation.
Origin Story
My journey didn't start with a degree; it started with curiosity.
I wrote my first line of HTML at age 8, tinkering on my Nan's slow computer back in the early Windows XP days. No tutors, no bootcamps—just me, Microsoft FrontPage, and a genuine desire to figure out how the screen worked.
By age 12, I had graduated to Lua. I wasn't just playing games; I was modifying them. I dove into the Multi Theft Auto (MTA) scene, eventually managing a server with 90 concurrent players and a 10-person staff team. The community was so diverse that I self-taught myself Spanish just to communicate and lead effectively.
At 18, I stepped into my first business partnership. Now, at 28, I operate as a freelancer and AI enthusiast, bringing two decades of "figuring it out" to professional problem solving.
The Philosophy of Breaking Things
People often call my background "unorthodox." I prefer to say that I learned by breaking things.
I am a strong believer that to solve the greatest challenges, you must first break them down—sometimes literally—to understand them. That's why I take on the difficult troubleshooting and disaster recovery tasks that others shy away from.
I've broken enough systems intentionally to understand how to fix nearly any scenario. Whether it's a legacy web architecture or a complex automation flow, I fix things that shouldn't be broken, and I automate things that shouldn't be manual.
The AI Era
I've been following the AI revolution closely since 2020, watching it evolve from the early days of basic image generation to the reasoning powerhouses we have today. I pride myself on staying in the loop.
My current workflow relies heavily on DeepSeek R1 and Google Gemini (I'm a big fan of the later models). I integrate these into complex N8N agent swarms to orchestrate workflows that feel less like scripting and more like intelligent collaboration.
Why This Aesthetic?
The terminal theme isn't just for show, though I admit—it looks cool.
More importantly, it conveys my world to you. It represents the command line precision where I feel most at home. It implies that while the interface is polished, there is complex machinery humming beneath the surface.
Future Transmissions
This blog won't be a place for tutorials on how to center a div. I intend to use this space to document what I'm actually working on. Expect to see:
- LLM Reviews & Comparisons: My honest takes on the latest models.
- N8N Workflows: Releases and breakdowns of the automation agents I'm building.
- Project Logs: Updates on what I'm building next.
- Thoughts: General musings on the state of tech.
I look forward to posting more soon.
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