About jFeliWeb

I should probably admit right up front that explaining what I do for a living tends to confuse people just a little. I build websites, fix the ones that get a little too dramatic, and every so often I teach a stubborn app how to behave. I have been at this for more than fifteen years, which is long enough to remember when jQuery felt magical and also long enough to have a few strong opinions about it. Tech changes faster than a rumor at a church picnic, so I learned early that staying sharp is not really optional.
I have always been the kind of person who pokes around anything broken just to see what is going on inside. That curiosity grew into a full career before I even had time to talk myself out of it. These days I run my own creative studio called BizDots Media while also juggling personal projects, building AI tools, and sharpening whatever skills seem interesting that week. And yes, I talk to my code like it is a living thing. Sometimes it listens. Sometimes it does not and that is when I stare at the screen like it owes me money.
Outside of coding, I am busy being a dad, coming up with new ideas at inconvenient times, and chasing goals that seem to multiply when I am not looking. I want to create things that genuinely help people, things that feel good to use, and things that make life just a bit easier. Call it ambition or call it stubbornness with decent manners. I am still figuring out which one it is.
Skills
Philosophy
I believe great work comes from two things: curiosity and caring. Both can get you into a little trouble, but usually the kind that leads somewhere useful. Technology changes faster than the weather in July, so instead of chasing every shiny tool that pops up, I try to build things with purpose and just enough personality to make people smile.
My goal is simple. Create things that feel good to use and hold up even when life gets messy. If I can mix in creativity, a bit of humor, and code that doesn’t fall apart when someone breathes on it, then I figure I’m doing alright. At the end of the day, I just want to leave the digital world a little cleaner than I found it, kind of like tidying up after a cookout but with more JavaScript than barbecue sauce.