In the coming days, I’ll be sharing a manifesto about how I envision the future of cooperation between humans and machines. But in short: my path into technology began a long time ago. I studied automation engineering back in 1987 - a time when IT was still far from mainstream, and my focus naturally fell on digital electronics.
My first computer wasn’t bought, it was built - etched circuit boards, hand-wired connections, the whole thing held together more by curiosity and passion than by perfection. Those early years shaped the way I think about technology: as something we can create, understand, and guide.
Later, I moved into medical technology, where I continued to work until recently. And now, as the world shifts again, I find myself returning to the old questions in a new context: How do we build systems that serve us? How do we design technology that understands us - not just technically, but humanly?
I am interested in knowing more... I am an Electrotechnical Engineer by thought, and an IT/HPC generalist by experience.
Would love to know more about your experiences and learn from them. Tag me please.
I have some inheritance from IBM by profession (but not an endorsement).