Thoughts
I write about a mix of things, some technical and some not. The technical work reflects my ongoing interests in theoretical computer science and cryptography. I usually share it as PDFs because I write almost everything in LaTeX. That environment suits how I think and how I structure formal ideas. Converting things to HTML feels like an unnecessary detour. I treat those PDFs as blog posts, and if you're curious enough to read them, you'll open them.
The non-technical writing is harder to classify. It isn't crafted for mass appeal and doesn't follow any editorial filter. Much of it grows out of long internal dialogues; questions that don't resolve neatly, thoughts that might sound difficult or uncomfortable in public discourse. I write them because I need to write them. They aren't meant to convince or perform; they just sit there, as traces of thought in motion. If even a few people read and reflect on them, that's enough. I'd rather put them into the open, flawed and unfinished, than let them vanish into private silence. The internet forgets very little, and in that persistence, there's a strange kind of comfort.