Expertise / Engineering
Software engineering with the infrastructure in mind
We build platforms and systems for businesses where software is load-bearing. Architecture comes first, the failure modes are part of the design, and the result is something that can be operated — not just demoed.
From architecture to running platform
Technical architecture
The decisions that are expensive to reverse — where state lives, how components talk, what happens when one of them fails — made deliberately and documented, before anyone writes code against them.
Platform development
Web platforms, APIs and the systems behind them, built for environments where traffic is measured in millions of daily visits. Performance and security are requirements from the first sprint, not optimizations at the end.
Systems design
Queues, caches, data flows, integrations — the connective tissue of a platform. We design these as systems with explicit contracts and predictable degradation, because that's what they are.
Streaming & video delivery
Live and on-demand video systems — ingest, delivery and playback on networks you don't control. Media punishes every weakness in a stack, and it's where some of our deepest experience lives.
Technical problem solving
The bug that only happens under load. The query that's fine until it isn't. We debug systems rather than symptoms — measure first, hypothesize second, change one thing at a time.
What 'done' means here
A feature that works is the minimum. Engineering work leaves our hands tested, reviewed, documented and observable — because somebody has to live with it, and it's often us.
Reviewed & tested
Code review and automated testing aren't ceremony — they're how a small senior team ships with confidence.
Documented decisions
A system whose structure fits on one page survives its authors. We write the page.
Observable by default
If you can't see what a system is doing in production, it isn't finished. Metrics and alerts ship with the feature.
Have a hard technical problem?
Those are the ones we like. Tell us what you're building or what's breaking.
Talk to an engineer →