Tearing it all down and building it back

This site has been through a few lives. The current one is simpler, more public, and much more honest about what I actually spend time thinking about.

The old version was a small personal blog with experiments bolted onto it. That was useful for a while, but it stopped matching the shape of the work. There is now enough public context around BigCompute, Convergent, Hugging Face releases, GitHub projects, talks, and local AI experiments that the website needed to become a map instead of a scrapbook.

What changed

The site now centers the themes that keep showing up: AI agents, computational mathematics, high-performance experimentation, local intelligence, multimodal media, open research, motorcycles, metal, and the general habit of taking strange systems seriously.

The older embedded assistant experiment is retired. The new site points visitors toward the public work and gives the whole thing a more deliberate visual language.

Why simpler wins

A personal website should answer a few questions quickly: who is this person, what do they care about, what have they made, and where should I go next? That is the bar now.

The web is better when it feels hand-built, but it still has to feel alive. This version tries to keep both: direct pages, strong typography, a Three.js front door, and enough structure for people and agents to understand what is here.