About FE-Engineer

Homelab
Software engineering
Local AI
AMD/ROCm

FE-Engineer is a practical engineering channel and site focused on building reliable systems at home and shipping useful software in the real world.

What fe-engineer.com is for

This site is where I collect the work that supports the channel: notes, walkthroughs, and projects that sit at the intersection of frontend engineering, infrastructure, and "make it work" problem-solving. The goal is to share approaches that are understandable, repeatable, and grounded in what I'm actually running.

What you'll find here

About FE-Engineer

FE-Engineer

FE-Engineer

Software engineer · homelab · infrastructure

13+ years
Full-stack
USAF (6 yrs)
  • Frontend-first, full-stack experience
  • Founding engineer at startup
  • U.S. Air Force, 6 years

I'm a software engineer with 13+ years of experience. My background is primarily frontend, but I work full-stack and have helped build and launch large-scale products and complex applications (including as a founding engineer at a startup). I also served in the U.S. Air Force for six years.

Product work: ComingUp Today

That same mindset shows up in the products I choose to build.

ComingUp Today

Product
Visit
  • Read-only, unified view across calendars
  • Visibility controls for households and small groups
  • Coordination without shared-editing complexity

If you're curious, you can read more about it at comingup.today.

One example of the kind of practical problem-solving I like to build is ComingUp Today. It started as a household need: a calm, shared view of what's coming up for multiple people across multiple calendars—without the constant "what's on your schedule?" back-and-forth.

ComingUp Today is not a replacement for Google Calendar. It's a read-only, unified view that helps households and small groups coordinate by seeing upcoming events across people and calendars in one place, with explicit visibility controls. It's especially useful in situations where multiple people need awareness of upcoming events without introducing the coordination problems that come with shared editing.

If you want the technical and infrastructure side of how I approach building systems and products, that's what fe-engineer.com and the channel are for.

Where to follow

@FE-Engineer