[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":90},["ShallowReactive",2],{"about":3},{"id":4,"title":5,"body":6,"description":82,"extension":83,"meta":84,"navigation":85,"path":86,"seo":87,"stem":88,"__hash__":89},"pages\u002Fabout.md","About",{"type":7,"value":8,"toc":76},"minimark",[9,25,34,37,42,50,58,66,69,73],[10,11,12,13,16,17,24],"p",{},"I'm Przemysław Przylucki. ",[14,15],"age",{},". Principal Architect at ",[18,19,23],"a",{"href":20,"rel":21},"https:\u002F\u002Fmmi.io",[22],"nofollow","MMI",", leading 25 engineers through the consolidation of three acquired businesses and six apps into a single mortgage platform. Most of my days are spent killing legacy, rethinking architecture, and figuring out how to make six things behave like one.",[10,26,27,28,33],{},"Before that I was CTO at ",[18,29,32],{"href":30,"rel":31},"https:\u002F\u002Fgetbonzo.com",[22],"Bonzo",", a real estate communication platform that MMI acquired in 2024. I led the development from MVP with a small team and we grew it into a successful business. Before Bonzo: a software house where I built a knowledge management system for a large manufacturer's plants, crypto where I worked on exchange platforms and price aggregators, and freelance where I built things like a plastic garbage recycling platform.",[10,35,36],{},"I care about solving problems with the least code possible and getting the domain right. Domain shapes language, language shapes how people think about the system. Most software is bad not because people can't code, but because they don't stop to reflect on what they're building or how they work. Being reflective is how you grow.",[38,39,41],"h2",{"id":40},"side-projects","Side projects",[10,43,44,49],{},[18,45,48],{"href":46,"rel":47},"https:\u002F\u002Fprojektplakat.pl",[22],"Projekt Plakat",", a poster store with dynamic generators that let you customize designs. Built it with a friend. Still running, hasn't made us rich.",[10,51,52,57],{},[18,53,56],{"href":54,"rel":55},"https:\u002F\u002Fsaaslaravel.com",[22],"saaslaravel.com",". I started this a few years ago because I wanted to teach people how to build SaaS products with Laravel without the architecture turning into a mess. The original idea was a paid course, but along the way I ended up building tooling that I think is more valuable as open source. The past couple of years haven't been kind on time so it's been sitting untouched, but I want to come back to it properly: release the package, use the domain for its docs, and get back to making YouTube content around it.",[10,59,60,65],{},[18,61,64],{"href":62,"rel":63},"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.youtube.com\u002F@saaslaravel",[22],"YouTube",". A channel where I talk about building SaaS with Laravel — architecture, tooling, and lessons from real side projects. Tied to saaslaravel.com. Want to get back to publishing regularly.",[10,67,68],{},"Carrey, fleet management platform with GPS tracking. Building it in my free time, mostly an excuse to start playing with IoT.",[38,70,72],{"id":71},"backstory","Backstory",[10,74,75],{},"I started coding at 12. I had a Minecraft server, one of the biggest in Poland at the time, and needed Java plugins to keep it running. By 15 I was high on programming and decided to build a medical patient record management system. I rebuilt that thing from scratch probably 10 times. Never referenced old solutions, just started over each time. I was doing wildly stupid things like writing my own calendar components because I didn't know libraries existed. Barely googled, barely read books. Just me and the problem. I puzzlemaxxed the learning journey. Every problem was mine to figure out. I still think it's the best way to learn. You hit every edge case, build a mental map from trial and error, and the understanding sticks because it's built on associations you formed yourself, not something you read and forgot.",{"title":77,"searchDepth":78,"depth":78,"links":79},"",2,[80,81],{"id":40,"depth":78,"text":41},{"id":71,"depth":78,"text":72},"I'm Przemysław Przylucki. . Principal Architect at MMI, leading 25 engineers through the consolidation of three acquired businesses and six apps into a single mortgage platform. Most of my days are spent killing legacy, rethinking architecture, and figuring out how to make six things behave like one.","md",{},true,"\u002Fabout",{"title":5,"description":82},"about","D6GGDawfyv_IeX8w0OpZIOSfwS6irRMfht1HV6zPN58",1777845398865]