Systems, orchestration, interfaces, delivery.
Built for intelligence. Wired for distance.
I spend my professional life shaping AI products, LLM workflows, and engineering systems that need to be useful under real pressure. Outside work, I move toward roads, routes, countries, and the kind of journeys that reset perspective from the inside out.
Places that change thought by changing scale.
Kanyakumari to Sissu and back through shifting terrain.
Dual Identity
Two different engines. One life.
What I do
The professional half is precise.
I work as an engineer, with AI and LLM-driven technology sitting at the center of the stack. My instinct is to turn ambiguity into architecture: define the flow, structure the system, evaluate the output, and make the experience dependable enough to survive real users instead of perfect demos.
- AI product experiences
- LLM workflows and prompting layers
- Backend orchestration and APIs
- Systems that care about reliability, not theatre
What moves me
The personal half is in motion.
My best resets come from movement. Roads, elevation changes, station platforms, unfamiliar food, late check-ins, long drives, and the strange clarity that only appears after distance has done its work. Exploration is not a hobby add-on. It is how I return to myself.
- Sunrises, winding roads, and unexpected detours
- Experiencing new traditions, food, and perspectives
- Countries and cities that deserve placeholders here
- Future journeys waiting for stamps and stories
Engineering Practice
Where the builder version of me operates.
This is the workbench: AI systems, LLM layers, product thinking, and the engineering discipline required to make intelligence useful.
Role
Software Engineer • AI Systems
Turning signals into systems and ideas into working code.
My work sits between backend engineering and AI-driven applications. I build software that connects intelligent models with real user experiences — focusing on systems that remain clear, reliable, and useful in practice.
How I work?
Technical Stack
AI Layer
Model-aware product building
- Prompt design and system instructions
- LLM experience flows
- Evaluation-minded iteration
- Human-usable AI interfaces
Engineering Layer
Architecture under constraints
- Python / ML / Data
- APIs, orchestration, services
- System architecture and reliability
- Practical engineering under real constraints
Project Lab
PathCraft - AI travel planner
PathCraft is a road-trip planning system built for route discovery, scenic stop selection, fuel planning, trip pacing, and day-wise itinerary generation.
- Combines route, scenic, stop, fuel, and recommendation engines
- Balances efficiency, scenic value, and overall trip experience
- Works through a CLI and an optional Chainlit + LangChain chat interface
- Uses deterministic planning with optional LLM-powered assistance
Road Chapter
The trip that deserves its own frame.
Explore on Wheels / India
Kanyakumari to Sissu, then back through a different mood of India.
What started as a road trip turned into a moving cross-section of India. From the southern edge of the country to the Himalayan gateway at Sissu, the journey crossed coastlines, cities, deserts, mountains, and long silent highways where distance itself became part of the experience.
The road changed constantly. Heat to cold, noise to silence, familiar to distant. Early drives, sudden weather shifts, and unplanned stops slowly turned into memories.
Somewhere along the way, distance stopped being a number— it became the experience itself.
Coastline To Cities
Kanyakumari, Kochi, Mangaluru, Morjim, Mumbai.
Kanyakumari marked the beginning — open and elemental, with Triveni Sangam setting the tone. Moving north, Jatayu Earth's Center and Bekal Fort added scale and history, while Maravanthe Beach carried the coastal rhythm forward.
Morjim brought a slower pause before the Western Ghats shifted everything into winding mountain roads. The entry into Mumbai through Atal Setu changed the pace completely — from open horizons to fast lanes and constant motion.
Plains To Mountains
Ahmedabad, Jaipur, Kasauli, Sissu, Chandigarh.
Ahmedabad marked the inland shift, while Jaipur brought color and pace. Sajjangarh Fort added elevation before the road began to climb.
Kasauli introduced winding hills, leading through Atal Tunnel into Sissu and Keylong — raw, quiet, and expansive. In Sissu, the night sky opened up, filled with stars that made the journey feel still for a moment. The descent into Chandigarh, with a stop at Rock Garden, felt like a return to structure.
Return Leg
Agra, Bhopal, Nagpur, Hyderabad, Bengaluru.
The return carried a different rhythm. A brief stop at Red Fort in Delhi led into Agra, where the Taj Mahal stood still against the movement of the journey. Bhopal brought a quieter pause with Shaurya Smarak, while Nagpur stretched the central leg into long, steady drives.
Hyderabad, with Charminar, reintroduced city energy before the final stretch toward Bengaluru, ending at the Adiyogi Shiva Statue — a still and fitting close to a journey built on movement.
International Chapter
Japan deserves a different tone.
Not loud. Not rushed. More like a memory built from precision, quiet confidence, and details that keep returning later.
Japan Note
One country. A very specific kind of impression.
Japan felt precise without being rigid. Everything moved with intention — trains arriving on time, streets flowing quietly, systems working without needing attention.
The experience wasn't loud. It stayed in the details. Clean spaces, structured movement, and a calm that made even busy places feel composed.
It wasn't just a place I visited. It was a different way of seeing how systems — and people — can exist in balance.
Arrival
First contact with a different rhythm.
The shift was immediate. Quieter streets, structured movement, and a sense of order that didn't need to announce itself. Everything felt intentional.
Movement
Precision without noise.
Trains arriving on time. Platforms moving in sync. Crowds flowing without friction. Movement here wasn't rushed — it was designed.
Cities
Order inside density.
Dense yet calm. Bright yet balanced. Every street carried detail — from neon lights to quiet corners that felt untouched by the rush.
Food
Simple, precise, intentional.
Meals felt crafted, not rushed. Every detail — presentation, taste, balance — carried a quiet discipline that made even simple food memorable.
Observation
Where systems just work.
Japan felt like a living system. Infrastructure, behaviour, and culture aligned in a way that removed friction. It changed how I think about systems — not just in code, but in real life.
Reflection
A quiet kind of impact.
Japan didn't overwhelm. It stayed subtle. The kind of place that leaves an imprint slowly — in how you notice details, structure systems, and move through space.
Not loud memories. Lasting ones.
Glimpses
Closing Signal
