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Schedule Interview NowWorking at Softaims has been an experience that continues to shape my perspective on what it means to build quality software. I’ve learned that technology alone doesn’t solve problems—understanding people, processes, and context is what truly drives innovation. Every project begins with a question: what value are we creating, and how can we make it lasting? This mindset has helped me develop systems that are both adaptable and reliable, designed to evolve as business needs change. I take a thoughtful approach to problem-solving. Instead of rushing toward quick fixes, I prioritize clarity, sustainability, and collaboration. Every decision in development carries long-term implications, and I strive to make those decisions with care and intention. This philosophy allows me to contribute to projects that are not only functional, but also aligned with the values and goals of the people who use them. Softaims has also given me the opportunity to work with diverse teams and clients, exposing me to different perspectives and problem domains. I’ve come to appreciate the balance between technical excellence and human-centered design. What drives me most is seeing our solutions empower businesses and individuals to operate more efficiently, make better decisions, and achieve meaningful outcomes. Every challenge here is a chance to learn something new—about technology, teamwork, or the way people interact with digital systems. As I continue to grow with Softaims, my focus remains on delivering solutions that are innovative, responsible, and enduring.
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Project entailing building landing pages for private colleges, specifically those with online courses. I lost count of how many different ones I worked on, at least 5, but the one featured is special in that I implemented most of it from beginning to end (otherwise I was employed mostly to retrofit and conslidate existing websites into a more consistent system). The websites themselves are pretty easy to make, but only because the company invested a great deal into getting the configuration and tooling right. Truly fascinating insight into how a well-oiled machine operates.
These are two different student engagement "experiences" designed to help universities guide new students through an online enrollment process that are offered through a company that I did some work for while one of their employees took some time off to recover from an injury. Pretty interesting stuff in that a lot of "experience management" happens behind the scenes to capture different responses from incoming students, and this requires, among other things, a very interesting internal component library that uses web components rather than a frontend framework like React, Vue, Angular, etc.
Yet another government website, this one being a joint effort between 4 agencies (which eventually became 5) to essentially market the state of New Mexico's Longitudinal Data System. Basically they collect and aggregate data about students from pre-school all the way to college and beyond. This is far from the most complex site I've had to do, but it is one of my favorites for an animation I brought to life using p5js. It also won a silver Addy (a kind of award given out by the American Advertising Federation).
A combined effort of the New Mexico department of Higher Ed and two workforce/labor agencies to connect New Mexicans to jobs as well as education opportunities after COVID vaccines rolled out and restrictions began to ease. Actually my first ExpressionEngine website, as well as my first government website. Job listings were provided via a very peculiar API provider that arguably abused its monopoly privilege with state governments to get away with very poor developer documentation
This was a simple internal tool built for a non-profit that allowed them to send a single text message to multiple people. Basically a text-blast application. Pretty simple really. Once you provide it with a message and some numbers, it uses the Twilio API to send the message to all the numbers you provided. Adding numbers every single time proved tedious in the first release, so a saved group functionality was added later on.
in Computer science
2011-01-01-2014-01-01