Science and Hardware
Exploring open-concept hardware and DIY instrumentation. Grounded in a 15-year background of designing custom microscopes and optical systems.
An independent creative studio and editorial hub exploring open-concept science, engineering, and digital arts.
Exploring open-concept hardware and DIY instrumentation. Grounded in a 15-year background of designing custom microscopes and optical systems.
Curating news, technical insights, and deep-dives into advanced instrumentation, physical sciences, and industrial engineering for the broader technical community.
More than scientific illustration. Exploring data storytelling, concept art, and original artwork bridging aesthetics with scientific accuracy.
Original rock and 80’s synthwave music, produced and distributed through Cosmael Music. Always experimenting with sound design.
Building personal coding challenges, tools, and algorithms to push the boundaries of data processing and image analysis workflows.
Microfunding and mentorship for indie creators and thoughtful tech. Past support includes independent game projects like Gamedec.
A look at past engineering builds, coding challenges, and ongoing creative pursuits.
A career history of designing microscopes and integrating analysis workflows prior to the creation of the ThinkLab.
Developing accessible, DIY hardware concepts and prototypes to democratize field research and general instrumentation.
A private, personal coding exercise exploring GPU-optimized localization algorithms and 3D rendering (V1).
Translating complex science into clear visual graphics, logo systems, and conceptual art.
Backing indie projects like Gamedec with community support, microfunding, and feedback loops.
Regularly publishing commentary and deep-dives on major breakthroughs in the life sciences.
A simple cycle that drives our science, systems, and storytelling.
Track major breakthroughs across life sciences, physics, and advanced instrumentation to find the most interesting problems.
Test ideas in the sandbox—whether that’s a new piece of Python code, a low-cost DIY hardware build, or a synthwave track.
Share the findings, the digital art, and the editorial commentary with the broader technical community.