The pursuit of innovation
I'm less interested in technology for its own sake than in whether it actually solves the problem in front of a real person.
I'm a founder and inventor, and I don't stay in one lane. The fields I've worked in so far are only the start — wherever I run into an important problem with no good tool built for it, I tend to go build it.
Some of that work is software: AI platforms and apps that put real capability in people's pockets. Some of it is hardware I can patent and put in people's hands. What ties it together is a bias toward the practical — solutions people can use today, not roadmaps for someday. There are more companies on the way and more patents to file; this is a body of work in progress, not a finished list. Innovation, to me, is just problem-solving that refuses to accept "that's how it's always been done."
Based in Atlanta, Georgia · edit this bio anytime
Usually one I've run into myself. If it isn't a genuine pain, it isn't worth building.
The obvious thing is often missing. I'd rather make it than wait for someone else to.
Used to extend what a person can do — never bolted on for its own sake.
Ship something usable now. A working answer beats an elegant theory every time.