Profile — rev. 2026
Software developer / CNC programmer / Project engineer
I build software that businesses run on, and control programs that machines run on. Two disciplines, one habit: taking a specification and turning it into something that actually works in production — not only on paper.
Most small companies do not need 1C or SAP. They need the five processes they actually have — orders, clients, stock, production, documents — in one place, without a licence fee per seat and without a six-month rollout. That is what I build: a system shaped around the company's real workflow, delivered in weeks, hosted where the client wants, and owned by the client.
Typical starting point: a company running on Excel, WhatsApp and memory. I map the process, migrate the data, and replace the mess with one screen.
My first line of work. I develop non-standard online systems — the ones a template or a page builder cannot carry: client portals, calculators, configurators, internal tools, integrations. If a business has a process, it can be moved online and automated.
I take a project end to end: specification, layout, back end, launch — and, when the client wants it, promotion afterwards.
My second line of work: digital modelling, vector graphics and control programs for CNC machines. More than ten years of writing programs and proving them out on the machine itself — from electrical contacts to casting moulds. I also introduce new technology on the shop floor and deliver finished parts from milling, turning and laser cutting.
A typical job: a drawing — sometimes a photo of one — comes in; a clean vector and a proven program come out, with the part cut, milled or turned to size.
A large food truck manufacturing project where I worked as designer and as the customer's representative on the shop floor, covering laser cutting and profile bending. The first prototype — frame and body — was designed by me personally. Food trucks built to that design now work in cities across Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan and Georgia.








I would rather be on friendly terms with the people I work for, so ask anything — about a project, an estimate, or whether something is possible at all.