
I build software with a calm, product-minded approach: clear interfaces, dependable systems, and details that make things easier to use.
I build web products that aim to feel clear from the first click. The work I enjoy most sits between product thinking and engineering craft: shaping the interface, structuring the logic, and making the whole thing feel dependable.
Hackathons taught me how to move fast, explain ideas clearly, and build under pressure. Longer projects taught me the opposite skill too: slow down, refine the details, and leave the code easier to work with than I found it.
I care about readable code, thoughtful UX, and products that feel steady rather than noisy. That is usually the thread running through everything I make.
A small toolkit I trust deeply, with just enough range to move comfortably from interface details to backend systems.
A few projects where product thinking, engineering quality, and interface craft come through most clearly.
An interactive distributed-systems learning platform that runs real Redis, BullMQ, RabbitMQ, Kafka, and PostgreSQL flows and visualizes them live through a TanStack Start frontend and Elysia backend.
A TypeScript document-conversion tool that turns Bijoy Bangla MCQ .docx files into structured Unicode JSON with raw LaTeX equations while preserving document order and option layouts.
An AI-powered toolkit for YouTube creators that combines channel analysis, competitor research, idea generation, thumbnail workflows, reels creation, SEO help, and comment intelligence.
A conference website and submission workflow for the 9th International Conference on Engineering Research, Innovation, and Education, presenting deadlines, tracks, notices, and author information for SUST.
A multi-platform LMS monorepo for Mehedi Math Academy that brings together a TanStack Start web app, Hono API, shared packages, and a React Native mobile app.
A desktop API client built with Tauri, React, TypeScript, and Rust that delivers native networking, a polished request editor, and cross-platform packaging as a fast Postman alternative.
A chapter of late nights, team effort, and 24-hour dopamine rushes. These hackathons shaped how I build, present, and grow under pressure.
These early hackathons pulled me into competitive building. My projects explored practical software ideas under pressure, and the experience pushed me deeper into product thinking, speed, and execution.
My first onsite hackathon. I worked on a smart waste management system designed to make collection more data-driven, and seeing the product work in a live competition made it unforgettable.
I led the frontend for an AI meeting scheduler that matched time slots to user needs. A strong product demo and clear presentation helped turn it into a championship win.
I helped build a creator toolkit that generated video ideas from trends, comments, and competitor signals. The product also included thumbnail generation, sentiment analysis, and calendar-based scheduling.
I handled deployment for a system focused on autism identification and gamified therapy. My role was keeping 18 services stable and running reliably throughout the event.
My final hackathon win. I worked on a voice reporting system where people could call a toll-free number, and the product turned those reports into structured data for an interactive climate dashboard.
Short notes from building, debugging, and paying attention to the details that shape a better product.
The best next step is usually a simple hello. If there is a role, product, or idea worth building carefully, I'd love to hear about it.