Steve Jobs
Watching Steve Jobs unveil the iPhone through iTunes made technology feel like magic. I was instantly hooked. I saw the vision no one around me seemed to see as well. All they cared about was the price! Shortly after, I began creating tech videos and tinkering with the iOS simulator through Apple’s Developer Program. While nothing I built back then held professional significance, it gave me something far more valuable: a passion that would last the test of time.
Xcode in 2007 vs 2026
My early attempts in 2007 did not result in any apps beyond a simple soundboard...after many YouTube videos. I eventually redirected efforts toward school, sports, and other activities. The return happened through Shortcuts & Automator, the built-in apps on Mac & iOS. Automation gave me quick wins to do what I needed in a way that made things way easier, but this time my ideas took off, and I didn't stop at one-off workflows. I started asking real engineering questions: How does this scale? How do I make it reliable? How do I turn personal tools into products people could actually use?
Today & the Future
Today, creating & publishing apps isn't just a hobby. It's a long-term practice that will continue to evolve every single day. Each project reveals new limits, and every limit becomes a reason to learn something new. What started as a childhood fascination has become 'this'—and 'this' is just the beginning. Thank you for being a part of the journey! — Caser Publishing