The AI era didn't make me irrelevant.
It made the boring part the valuable part.
Anyone can prompt an app into existence now. I'm the person you call when that app needs to survive production — when the disk fills up, the email gets blacklisted, or the build breaks at 2am.
That's a true sentence about me, and it's the part that doesn't go away when a new model drops. Generating code is cheap. Keeping the thing running under real load, real users, and real 3am failures is not — and that's where I've spent the last years.
I run two live products, not a portfolio. Mailgreet handles real email deliverability. ProWebLook ships 12 API tools people actually hit. Those products are the resume.
I work with founders and teams who already have something running — or are about to — and need it to not die. Project work when there's a clear fix. Ongoing when the system needs a keeper.
> got something that needs to survive production?