
Hey, I'm Tim,
a software developer and AI engineer who likes building useful things, learning all day, learning from mistakes, and occasionally disappearing into technical rabbit holes on purpose.
This corner of the internet is where all of that ends up.
The name of the blog "Debugging Dinner" is basically my daily routine. I fix bugs during the day and experiment in the kitchen at night, using the exact same approach. Try something, break it, fix it, repeat.
Turns out a missing semicolon and a missing ingredient cause the same level of chaos. The only difference is that you can usually fix dinner by adding butter or cheese.
The tech side
I spend a lot of time writing software, maintaining open-source work, and building things that are hopefully useful to other people too.
If you like practical code, experiments, and real projects instead of vague tech hype, you’ll probably feel at home here.
The non-tech side
Not everything about me takes place on screens and terminals.
I also enjoy cooking, travelling, and sports, which is a nice way to balance out long stretches of debugging and overthinking.
My angle
I like tools that are open, ideas that are practical, and websites that don’t try too hard to track everyone all the time.
So this site is intentionally simple and personal.
Currently
Right now, I’m especially interested in the space where software, AI, data, and everyday usefulness meet.
I'm particularly interested in the current use and challenges of AI, and I love explaining the technical issues in a way that's easy to understand.
Start anywhere
If you want, start with the topic on the blog you came for and wander from there.
That’s more or less how this site was made in the first place.