The best technology disappears. It earns a place in your life quietly, without demanding attention, and deepens over time into something you genuinely rely on. That's the design problem I keep returning to. I'm an interaction researcher and designer working at the edge of ambient and physical computing. My core interest is how intelligent systems build long-term relationships with the humans inside them, not through better interfaces, but through presence, spatial awareness, and behavior that fits naturally into how people already move through the world.
That question has taken me through AI features for Android and Pixel at Google, fleet command systems for autonomous robots, acoustic and spatial intelligence research, and applied AI strategy at the frontier of how agentic systems and humans will work together. The projects change. The question stays the same.
I work as a hybrid: I investigate problems the way a researcher would and build proof of concepts the way a designer does. My lens comes partly from years in the game industry, where the core design question is never the interface but the relationship between a person and a system over months and years. That's the same question, applied to technology that actually matters.
Say hi.