Innovation
Experiments, prototypes and proof-of-concepts. I lock an AI agent in a container, give it a spec, and see what comes out.
I build software while walking
Non-developer. No laptop. Walking through Lisbon, talking into Telegram, checking preview URLs on my phone. This is how I ship code.
My accountant sends screenshots. My AI builds tools from them
A WhatsApp screenshot with financial tasks. 30 minutes later: three CLIs that didn't exist before. Not task execution. Infrastructure creation.
I put an AI agent in a box and told it to build
A Docker container, three markdown files, and an agent that reads them, builds a complete app, tests its own work, and fixes its mistakes. No human in the loop. Until something breaks.
I rebuilt a luxury website from my bed at 11 PM
Staying at a historic Portuguese estate. Their website was embarrassing. I fixed it that night, without touching a laptop.
From 'how are my ads doing?' to complete reporting infrastructure
I asked for campaign stats. My AI built an entire reporting system I can query anytime from the terminal.
From 'is now a good time to buy?' to automated market intelligence
I wanted to know when Bitcoin dips are worth buying. My AI built a complete analysis system that runs every morning at 8 AM.
From Notion to nothing, and that was the plan
Everything lived in Notion. Then I deleted it. Not because Notion was bad, but because I'd built a black box I couldn't control.
My digital colleague was dumb. So I made it smart
It started as a Telegram bot that forwarded messages to Claude. Six months later: persistent memory, verification layers, parallel tasks, and 500+ tests.
6,000 music genres in one graph. Built in a weekend
Every genre from everynoise.com as an interactive knowledge graph. Click a node, hear a 30-second Spotify preview. Start minimal, explore endlessly.
A 3D skull you can click. Connected to a knowledge graph
22 skull bones as a 3D model. 120+ nodes of cranial osteopathy knowledge. Click a bone, the graph lights up. Click the graph, the skull rotates. Built for OsteosOnline.
150 years of osteopathy, mapped as a knowledge graph
From A.T. Still in 1874 to today's European regulation landscape. 100+ nodes mapping the founders, techniques, schools, legal battles, and movements that shaped the profession.