Portfolio

I participated in a hackathon in which I developed a duck piano. called "Quackboard" You can create your own songs and share them. The front-end was made with Next.js and the backend with Supabase....
I created Is Nuxt 3 Ready? to list the compatibility of Nuxt 3 modules.
After two years of Systems Engineering, I decided to study Computers Engineering instead. Excited for this new chapter, and thankfully I could validate almost half of the degree! Being both remote,...
Thrilled to announce that I have joined a US company as a Software Engineer, full remote. Looking forward to this new chapter! 🎉
Thanks to GitHub for Students, I got a 6-months coupon for Frontend Masters, where I learnt and refined my knowledge about with workshops about JavaScript, Linux, networks, Vue.js, WebGL, WebAssemb...
I got an early invite code to Polywork on their Twitter account. Very happy to have joined this platform.
Translated Slidev docs into Spanish. Shortly after, I joined the Slidev organization to maintain the translations up to date and suggest code fixes from time to time.
I helped Cheetah Mobile translate the interface of some of their flagship apps (Clean Master, CM Locker, CM Launcher), being mentioned in their credits page.
Created a new brand and website for Antique Radio Shop using Nuxt 2. The changes were very welcomed by their clients, as well as a 250% boost in visitors.
I started working on a entertainment platform called Webspace, which I co-founded, that empowered creators. During my time, I led the creation of in-house cloud solutions for the company as well as...
Published Gekkou, a chatbot library made for Fandom's chat application in Node.js. Built with a clean and extendable architecture via plugins, it was widely used.
- Managed +100 multi-lingual online communities ('wikis') on the platform with bi-weekly checkups and user liaision. - Seeded new content and founded the backbones of communities that reached thous...
My first steps into (self-taught) web development were made on a famous wiki platform, back then called Wikia, which allowed CSS, JavaScript and a subset of HTML and custom tags called wikitext.