A path traced through code, chairs, and the occasional Royal Enfield.
01
— The Builder
A solo operator who ships systems end-to-end.
I'm Farshad K V — 21 years old, born and based in Kerala, India. Senior Technical Expert and Tech Team Head at Momentori Infinite Solutions — but every project I've shipped under that title (and before it) was built with my own hands, alone.
No co-founder. No senior engineer. No design partner. Just a deadline and a problem to solve.
That's not a brag — it's the constraint that shaped me. When you build alone, you learn to think across the entire stack: architecture, backend, mobile, DevOps, security, design.
02
— In the Flow
An old HP laptop and a habit of finishing.
Most of my best work has been written on this same HP laptop. Earbuds in, sometimes a chai going cold beside me, a single browser window with twenty tabs of Laravel and Flutter docs.
I started writing my first lines of code at 16. By 19, I shipped my first production deployment to real, paying users. The leap from "abstract knowledge" to "applied engineer" happened the night I deployed something at 2 AM, broke it, and fixed it before anyone noticed.
That's the rhythm — build, break, fix, ship. Repeat for years until it becomes muscle memory.
03
— Off Duty
Tools are tools. The thinking is the work.
Laravel, Flutter, PHP, SQL, Google Apps Script, Cloud, DevOps — these are instruments. The actual craft is reading a business problem, breaking it down, and choosing the right combination of tools to solve it.
I've built multi-tenant SaaS architectures from scratch, scrubbed malware out of hacked WordPress installs at 4 AM, and automated WhatsApp screenshot OCR with vision APIs — same skill underneath: pattern recognition + relentless iteration.
Every line of code is a future maintenance contract. Write it for the engineer who'll inherit it at 3 AM — and remember: that engineer is usually me.
04
— Beyond the Screen
The life behind the keyboard.
I don't just write code. I notice spaces, lights, geometry, ergonomics — and somehow, those observations end up shaping my UI decisions. A restaurant's curved ceiling teaches more about hierarchy than another tutorial would.
Building software at this pace requires not building software sometimes. Stepping away. Letting the subconscious untangle the knot. The best refactors I've done arrived between bites of food, not between key presses.
Solo work is sustainable only if you can also be solo with yourself — without a screen.
05
— The Road Ahead
A Engine, and a longer road.
Some things, you don't refactor. A Engine doesn't run smooth — it thumps. It's heavy, it's stubborn, and it asks something of you on every ride.
I'm 21 now. Tech Team Head at Momentori. Solo builder of seven shipped systems. The next decade isn't about doing more of the same — it's about going deeper. Bigger architectures. Harder problems. More leverage.
Stay solo, stay sharp. Build slow, ship fast. The road's long.