Designer.
Data practitioner.
Builder.
I work between three practices: product design, data analytics, and experimentation.
Selected work · 2025 — 2026
4 of 4
On Connecting Tokens to Embeddings
Tracing and visualising the encoding of human-readable text into embeddings that are consumable by a neural network.
On Spaced Repetition as a Knowledge Management System
How a marriage between the right algorithm and data structure can unlock multiple possibilities in a knowledge management system.
Brain Reps: Building a Reproductive Endocrinology Research Tutor
A graph-augmented spaced-repetition research agent built solo in 10 days — Neo4j, Qdrant, Cloudflare Workers, and Ollama, at $0 cloud cost. From monolith to multi-channel production.
Improving Access to Fertility Education & Medical Management Services
A booking and landing page for a FEMM-certified physician. Designed to convert a curious visitor into a confirmed appointment in two clicks. Built with a split-panel layout, interactive Physarum canvas, and content strategy precise enough to handle reproductive health with both clinical rigour and human warmth.
Knowing as a working method.
Expositions of insights from inside data and AI work. Case studies and reflections on what was tractable and what wasn't.
Enter Gnosis →A working notebook of experiments.
Active, paused, complete, and abandoned experiments. All four states stay visible. This is where the next idea is born.
Enter Tinker →One person, three practices, kept in public.
I'm a product designer, developer and AI/data practitioner based in Nairobi. I learn by building. Half my work is for clients - usually small teams trying to do something new, while the other half are my own experiments, and made public on this site.
I work across design, software and applied data science. I try to keep the different practices in conversation with each other — to let experiments inform what I do for clients, and let client work raise questions that pull me into new territory. The work is mostly for clients, but I write about it on this site because I find it more useful to see how things came together over time than to see the final shape.
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