About Me

I’m a software tester focused on risk and real-world use.

My work centers on understanding how systems behave — not only when they follow expected paths, but when they drift, degrade, or encounter conditions that were never considered. I’m interested in the space between what is specified and what actually happens.

Testing, to me, is not the execution of scripts. It is an ongoing process of thinking: exploring, discovering, observing, and reporting with clarity.

About Notes

My background in journalism led me to technical writing and eventually to software testing. I’ve moved through different roles over time, but testing is where I’ve found the kind of deep thinking I value most.

Much of my day-to-day work is captured as notes — observations, questions, partial conclusions, and ideas about testing.

Not everything fits neatly into a ticket or a report. Some of the most useful insights begin as fragments: something that doesn’t quite align, a pattern that starts to repeat, a question that hasn’t yet been answered.

Over time, these notes accumulate into a working understanding of the system.