I make software.[github]
Lumilearn – Software Engineer
I am currently working on a product I strongly believe in—an edtech platform that tackles two major problems plaguing education in this part of the world: inadequate income opportunities for educators and lack of quality learning resources for students.
Pullus Africa – Software Engineer
Looking back, what made this project extraordinary wasn't just the technology we built, but knowing our work genuinely improved people's livelihoods.
When I joined Pullus, my primary responsibility was infrastructure overhaul. Complete infrastructure overhaul. Take the old house down, raise up a new one—but with subtlety. Rather than disrupting operations, we achieved this by first understanding the core business processes and working closely with stakeholders to ensure seamless transitions.
The technical rebuild enabled Pullus to scale efficiently while maintaining reliability for the farmers who depended on our platform. Today, Pullus has grown to become the leading solution for improving the throughput and output of small-scale poultry farmers across Africa.
Our efforts paid off—both technically and in real-world impact.
Sweetride — Software Engineer & Technical Lead
By far one of the most challenging projects I have ever worked on. The distributed, yet connected nature of the product presented unique challenges that pushed my team and me to innovate at every turn.
The complexity was multi-layered: implementing and customizing Dijkstra's shortest path algorithm for optimal routing, establishing robust data synchronization across distributed services, enabling real-time communication between drivers and riders, and building a location-based cost calculator using payment contracts and dependency injection patterns.
This wasn't just about building a ride-sharing platform—it was a masterclass in both cutting-edge engineering and team leadership. Every challenge made us better.
Backstory
- ○ 2017, during my third year of university, I picked up graphic design—still unsure if it was a hobby or something more intentional. My biggest early jobs came through my local church and a referral from my mother.
- ○ 2018, I joined a web design cohort taught by a coursemate. I can't say if it was intentional, but I would have pursued it anyway. One thing I'm sure of: if there's an opportunity to learn, I'll keep moving forward. I didn't make anything substantial from this phase, but I learned basic HTML and CSS