I've been building software for about 4 years now, and honestly, the thing I enjoy most is solving real problems for real people. Not just writing code that works, but writing code that lasts — the kind that's easy to hand off, easy to scale, and doesn't fall apart six months after you ship it.
I got my start studying Computer Science in Ethiopia, then pushed myself further through ALX Africa's software engineering program. From there, things moved fast. I picked up freelance work, built everything from e-commerce platforms to betting sites, integrated local payment gateways, handled database migrations — the unglamorous stuff that teaches you more than any tutorial ever could.
Eventually I landed remote roles with companies in Mexico, where I got to work on genuinely challenging problems. At Carecentral I built a healthcare SaaS platform from the ground up — multi-tenant architecture, a Flutter mobile app for nurses working in areas with little to no internet, real-time scheduling systems, Stripe integrations. At Atend I modernized a legacy system and saw the product all the way through to an acquisition, including the full technical handover. Those experiences taught me how to move fast without being reckless, and how to care about the details even when deadlines are tight.
In between, I founded Redjebena — got selected into the ALX Accelerator out of 400 applicants, led a small team, figured out go-to-market strategy, pitched to investors. It didn't just make me a better developer; it made me think more like a builder.
Tech-wise, I work across the full stack. React, Vue, Node, NestJS, Flask, Golang, MySQL, PostgreSQL, MongoDB, Redis, Docker, Kubernetes — I won't list everything, but I'm comfortable jumping between layers and picking up whatever a project needs. I've always been more interested in understanding systems deeply than collecting badges.
Outside work I read a lot about behavioral psychology, follow the open-source world closely, and lift weights — which, if you think about it, has a lot in common with good engineering. Progressive overload, consistency, no shortcuts.
If any of this resonates, I'd genuinely enjoy a conversation.