Hey there,

Software—and the way we build it—is changing faster than ever. As AI tooling becomes a major part of how we build, everything from early planning to deployment is being reshaped. This blog is where I share my thoughts, ideas, and lessons as I try to understand what’s next for software development.

A bit about me

I’ve been building software for over a decade. Along the way, I’ve failed more times than I can count—and had some wins too. I’ve built and scaled teams from 0 to nearly 100 people. I’m the cofounder and CTO of my current startup, where we’ve grown from zero to over $30M ARR in just 5 years.

But when I saw what large language models from OpenAI, Anthropic, and others could do, it became clear: we’re at a breaking point. The way we think about building and experiencing software will never be the same.

What’s next

The cost of building software is dropping quickly. Shipping a new product or feature in a single day will become normal. People with little or no coding background will be able to create software that solves real problems for them.

That also means the playbooks and lessons we’ve leaned on for years might not apply anymore.

Time to make a shift

As a technical founder, I’ve always been comfortable in the details—designing systems, writing code, and keeping control of every layer. But staying in that comfort zone can be a trap. I know I need to step fully into this new world, rethink my assumptions, and immerse myself in what’s coming next. That’s why I created nosemicolons.com.

What is nosemicolons

Nosemicolons is my journal of thoughts, experiments, and lessons learned while exploring what it means to build products in the age of AI. It’s a world where communication happens mostly with AI assistants, specs stand as the source of truth, and we barely need to know—or even care—about the code, the programming language, the syntax, or anything happening behind the scenes.

At the end of the day, good products solve real problems. That hasn’t changed.