One person. One AI. Shipping real things.
Solo developer based in Europe. Building tools at the intersection of AI and productivity.
Not a startup. Not an agency. Just one person writing code that solves actual problems.
I designed the Elara Protocol — a post-quantum universal validation layer for digital work. Three whitepapers, a US provisional patent (63/983,064), and a reference implementation with real post-quantum cryptography running in under 2ms.
I build Elara Layer 1, the reference implementation of that protocol. Dilithium3 + SPHINCS+ signatures, SQLite-backed DAG, CLI for validating files from the terminal. 2,000 lines of Python, 50 tests passing.
I build Elara Core, a 26,000-line MCP server that gives AI assistants persistent memory, mood tracking, and self-awareness. It's on PyPI. 39 tools across 12 modules. It works.
I build HandyBill, a Flutter app for invoice and expense tracking. Dark theme only. Offline-first. Accountant-ready.
Based in Montenegro. Working late. Building things.
How things get built here.
I test on physical devices. I deploy from the terminal. I write tests that actually run. I document what matters.
When something breaks, I fix it in the next session. When something works, I ship it immediately.
No meetings. No standups. No sprint planning. Just code, commit, push.
The tools that build the products.
I build with Claude Code. It's my dev partner. We've shipped 28,000+ lines of Python together — from protocol implementations to AI memory systems.
I gave it persistent memory, mood tracking, and episodic recall. Now it remembers our conversations, tracks project momentum, and learns from past mistakes.
That's what Elara Core does. It's the memory system powering my AI assistant. And the Elara Protocol is what will eventually validate all of it cryptographically.
Links and contact information.