<samp>I'm an American embedded software engineer with diverse industry experience. From large commercial Java projects to low-level C firmware development, I've done a little bit of everything (except web development as will be evident with this website). Such experience allows me to understand and solve new problems quickly. My hobbies are just as eclectic as my professional experience. This website showcases many of my personal projects.</samp>
<h6 class="card-subtitle mb-2 text-muted">Selenium-Based Web Crawler</h6>
<p class="card-text">Yama is a powerful developer-friendly web crawler/scraper built with Selenium and Java. Built from the ground up by yours truly.</p>
<p class="card-text">If you only have a hammer, everything looks like a nail. Repley combines Apache Tomcat and ChartJS to make dynamic database chart generation as easy as editing a JSON file.</p>
<p class="card-text">Darkstar is my first foray into building my own drone. I used a mixture of open source software and some of my own stuff to get the hunk of junk into the air </p>
<h6 class="card-subtitle mb-2 text-muted">Reliable and cheap desk</h6>
<p class="card-text">Building my dream desk on a poor-college-student budget. The end result: a portable and rock solid desk with a couple of flaws</p>
<p class="card-text">A post on my website about how I built my website? Yep. Turns out things aren't quite plug 'n play when you're a stubborn engineer who wants something to function in a very specific way</p>
<h6 class="card-subtitle mb-2 text-muted">Music to my ears</h6>
<p class="card-text">I find that I learn best by doing. So when I starting considering getting into the <i>extremely</i> expensive hobby of analog modular synths, I figured the best way to start would be to build my own. The results aren't terribly impressive, but helped me learn a whole ton along the way</p>