neisanael.my.id
Neisanael
About Me
neisanael.my.id
I started with a soldering iron and a multimeter — learning the physical foundation of technology through mechatronics. From 3-phase electrical systems to CNC machining, from PLC programming to 3D printing, I learned to build with my hands before I built with code.
That path led me through networking infrastructure (Mikrotik, LAN/WAN), into cloud engineering via Bangkit / Kampus Merdeka on GCP, and finally into software — where I taught myself Laravel, Rust, Next.js, and Node.js to bridge the gap between infrastructure and application.
"I didn't follow a straight path — I built my own."
Today I work across the full stack — from designing cloud infrastructure to shipping production code. Every layer I've touched informs the next, giving me a perspective that pure specialization can't replicate.
Skills & Tools
Hardware & Fabrication
CAD & Design
Networking & Infrastructure
Cloud & DevOps
Software Development
Projects
Library API
Restful API for library management with authentication, borrowing system, and catalog search. Built for reliability and clean architecture.
Streamforge
Stream processing pipeline for real-time data transformation. Handles high-throughput event streams with minimal latency.
Wayfora
Full-stack web platform with modern UI and real-time features. Focused on user experience and performance optimization.
Homelab
Self-hosted infrastructure running Docker, reverse proxies, monitoring, and automated deployments. Documented for reproducibility.
DIY CoreXY 3D Printer
Custom-built CoreXY 3D printer from scratch — frame fabrication, wiring, firmware configuration, and calibration.
The Other Side
"There's more to building than just code."
Japanese Learning
Studying the language and culture — from kana to keigo. The discipline of learning Japanese mirrors the discipline of engineering.
Anime & OST
Storytelling through animation and music. The attention to craft in anime production resonates with how I approach building systems.
Reading List
Always reading — technical papers, system design books, and the occasional sci-fi. Knowledge compounds when you let it.
Economics & Philosophy
Understanding systems of value and thought. Economics teaches incentives; philosophy teaches clarity. Both make you a better engineer.