It Was Supposed to Be a Side Project
My AI Adventures started as a blog—part learning journal, part chaos log—where I documented whatever weird thing I was trying to automate that week. I was tinkering with Zapier, OpenAI, Airtable… anything I could connect with duct tape and curiosity.
Then people started asking me to build things for them. One client turned into a few, and soon I was knee-deep in automations, agents, and database schemas I never thought I’d understand. So I gave the project a name upgrade: Logicweave. It sounds a little more serious, but don’t worry—I’m still winging it half the time. I’ve just gotten really good at it.
What started as evening experiments with GPT-3 and n8n turned into client projects, then referrals, then a full consultancy. I documented everything on this blog — the wins, the debugging sessions that lasted until 3am, and the tools that actually delivered.
Along the way I earned AWS certifications, built production AI agents for clients across three continents, and learned that the gap between a demo and a deployable system is where most projects fail. That gap is what LogicWeave exists to close.