Staff Software Engineer at Cybersecurity Company Bishop Fox
As a Staff Software Engineer at Bishop Fox, I worked on a project to help clients identify vulnerabilities in their digital assets more effectively.
Explore my work and see what I've built. Filter by technology to find projects that interest you.
As a Staff Software Engineer at Bishop Fox, I worked on a project to help clients identify vulnerabilities in their digital assets more effectively.
During my time as a **Senior Full-Stack and DevOps Engineer at Mento**, I had the opportunity to lead a series of high-stakes architectural overhauls designed to eliminate technical debt, optimize performance, and drastically reduce operational overhead.
The mission was clear: take a high-growth startup’s legacy infrastructure and re-engineer it into a high-performance, real-time ecosystem capable of supporting millions of frontline workers.
During my tenure as a **Full Stack Engineer** at Yellowme, I was presented with a challenge that would define my approach to modern software architecture: transforming the digital backbone of **FinBe (Financiera Bepensa)**, a heavyweight in the financial sector.
My mission was to engineer a seamless, invite-only e-commerce experience that bridged the gap between physical retail and digital convenience.
When **Powerade** launched a marathon series designed to engage tens of thousands of runners, the technical requirement was absolute: a platform that could facilitate registration, track performance, and manage a complex rewards economy without a single point of failure.
I built Focus Writer: a minimalist, zero-distraction editor engineered to trade UI bloat for pure flow.
I recently served as a Frontend Software Engineer on the core team tasked with a complete architectural rebuild of the WSJ news article reader.
I completed a project that applied the principles of Darwinian evolution to a classic navigation problem: automating a playthrough of Super Mario Bros. using a Genetic Algorithm (GA)
In the tech world, it’s easy to use abstractions without fully understanding the machinery beneath them. To truly master a concept, I believe you have to build it from the ground up.