I've spent 25 years building software — from bare metal to Kubernetes to whatever comes next.
Started with chaos engineering and containers. Built Pumba to break things in production on purpose. Then Docker, Kubernetes, cloud architecture — the usual path of someone who enjoys watching systems fail gracefully.
These days I'm deep into AI agents and infrastructure — building bridges between LLMs and the real world:
- pumba - State-of-the-art chaos testing, network emulation, and stress testing tool for containers (Docker, Containerd, Podman)
- k8s-mcp-server — AI assistants that actually talk to your cluster (kubectl, helm, istio, argo)
- aws-mcp-server — same idea, but for AWS CLI, sandboxed
- spotinfo — because Spot pricing shouldn't be a mystery
- ccgeram - Telegram ↔ tmux bridge for Claude Code, Codex CLI, and Gemini CLI
The shift from "I write code" to "I orchestrate agents that write code" happened faster than anyone expected. Not sure if that's exciting or terrifying. Probably both.
Go · Python · Kubernetes · AWS · MCP · AI Agents
Opinions are my own. Code is open source. Future is uncertain.





