PortfolioAboutPublicationsContact
Dark software studio workspace with code on a monitor

Thoughtspace

Software products, websites, extensions, apps, and games.

About the founder

I started Thoughtspace to see what ambitious ideas can become in this new era of software.

This is the founder's vision behind the studio: a place to build useful tools, creative software, and durable products with care, speed, and product discipline.

Why I am building this

I have always had more ideas than time: games I wanted to build, applications I wished existed, and everyday problems I wanted to solve with software. The difference now is that AI has made the distance between imagination and a working product shorter than it has ever been.

Thoughtspace is my way of taking that seriously. I want to design and ship useful products, creative tools, and practical software for people who are trying to bring their own ideas to life.

The studio is AI-powered, but the point is not novelty for its own sake. The point is to build useful software with strong judgment behind it: clear interfaces, durable systems, and tools that solve real problems.

What guides the work

Build from real problems

The best ideas usually start with a frustration I have felt directly or seen others run into repeatedly.

Make creative work useful

Games, tools, and products should respect the person using them: clear, polished, and worth their time.

Help other builders move faster

Some products are meant to support people who also want to turn imagination into something concrete.

Keep product discipline at the center

My background in consulting, product management, and software delivery keeps the work grounded in outcomes, not just demos.

Background

I bring more than a decade of professional experience across consulting, product management, and building software products, including applications that serve tens of millions of customers at companies like Best Buy and lululemon. That experience shapes how I think about the studio: creative ambition matters, but so do clarity, reliability, and the discipline to turn an idea into something people can actually use.