Where medicine meets code
The best medical software is written by people who feel the friction
Each of these five products began as a frustration inside a real hospital day — a registry in a spreadsheet, a protocol in someone's memory, a report typed at midnight. I build what I need, use what I build, and keep only what survives real clinical work.
Clinidict
Dictating…
“Severe mitral regurgitation with flail P2 segment. LVEF 55%. Advised transoesophageal echo…”

The portfolio
Five products, one mission: less friction
Building something for medicine?
I'm always happy to talk shop — clinical workflows, health-tech ideas, or how a cardiologist ended up shipping software.