I’m Prashant Patel, an AI/ML Engineer with a love for building clean, thoughtful, and scalable systems. I’ve worked across both consultancies and large product companies, which has given me a strong foundation in system integration, solution architecture, and the many hats an AI Engineer ends up wearing - be it MLOps, backend development, or designing intelligent solutions end-to-end.
I approach software design like building with LEGO-structured, modular, and purposeful. To me, writing code is a quiet act of communication with the future; it should be as clear and intentional as a well-written message to the next developer who picks it up. I enjoy thinking at abstract levels and solving real-world problems with elegance and simplicity. 🌱
A couple of years ago, I started neuralware. - a name that reflects where I believe software is headed: systems powered not just by logic, but by learning. It’s rooted in a long-standing fascination with neural networks and the idea that software is evolving into something more organic, more adaptable.
Reading Building a Second Brain by Tiago Forte inspired me to begin sharing my knowledge through this blog. We now live in an era where AI models are trained on our digital footprints - our code, our thoughts, our documentation. I believe that to shape a truly insightful oracle for the future, we need to feed it new, thoughtful, and human content - not just recycled history. It struck me how timely it is to contribute something meaningful to the growing collective knowledge.
I naturally learn by doing - constantly experimenting, absorbing new ideas, and refining my understanding. This process of creation and iteration resonates deeply with the idea that we only know what we make, as Giambattista Vico so eloquently put it:
“Verum Ipsum Factum”
– Giambattista Vico, an Italian Philosopher
Outside of work, you’ll find me either chasing after my toddler, getting lost in a good book, or immersing myself in platformer games on my Switch. I’m not one for spending much time outdoors - unless there’s a mountain involved. While I’m no professional climber, I am always up for scaling heights with good company to enjoy the views from the top; I find it the best way to disconnect and refresh.