About
Background
I'm Alejandro Elbaz, 25, based near Madrid.
I grew up working in a small technology services company my father built from scratch. Over the course of eight years there, I became the kind of generalist who does a bit of everything — taking websites from basic templates to modern stacks with Next.js, Astro, Tailwind and Vercel, managing Microsoft 365 tenants and Cloudflare configurations, looking after domains, DNS and SSL, running Linux servers and Docker environments, onboarding clients and handling day-to-day technical support. AI tooling has been a genuine accelerator for me. I'm not a deep programmer — I read HTML and CSS fluently and understand the computer science underneath, but I don't write complex JavaScript from scratch.
The bigger picture
Working that closely with small businesses taught me where they actually struggle with technology, and how even modest improvements to infrastructure, documentation and processes can make a meaningful difference. It also opened up a wider curiosity. I started exploring how money works, geopolitics, investing, the ideas behind Bitcoin and decentralised technologies, robotics, physics, mathematics, biotechnology and neuroscience. The more I looked, the more the patterns connected — understanding one system sharpens the way you see all the others.
Now
In early 2026 I stepped away from the family business to take full ownership of my own direction. I wanted a cleaner environment, real structure, and the room to go deeper.
Right now I'm looking for a remote role in technical support or web operations — somewhere I can contribute straight away while I study mathematics daily, with the aim of starting a degree in Physics or Engineering around 2027.
This site
This website doubles as a public notebook and a portfolio: a place to document what I'm learning, break down complex systems in plain language, and build small, practical tools. I'm still the same hands-on generalist I've always been — just deliberately laying the rigorous foundations I'll need for the long run.