I built an entire web application using Django REST Services for my capstone project. It has a backend
with APIs and a frontend which was designed with HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and Bootstrap. And I added
Leaflet JS for real-time mapping, which proved that I can build beyond a single-level technology
structure. The whole project was end to end and handled from data to logic to UI, which shows that I
have a complete cycle of development skills.
In yet another project I created a full-fledged inventory system with XAMPP, PHP, MySQL, and
phpMyAdmin. This had given me the practical experience of backend scripting, designing databases,
and server-side logic using the LAMP stack, which are all skills that remain relevant to many enterprise
systems.
At my internship, I was quickly brought up to speed with how the company operated using the enterprise
frameworks
ASP.NET Boilerplate and
ASP.NET Zero. In fact, I had never one day been exposed to
those technologies; yet here I was pushing real features just two weeks in, everything from simple fixes
all the way up to complex modules. Proof that I could learn quickly and so immediately churn output,
even in an environment that was less than familiar.
An academic project included analyzing Kaggle datasets; data visualization dashboards were created
that significantly cultivated my skill in deriving and conveying insights out of raw data. I also created a
voice-controlled video game using Pygame in Python and integrated it using Google Teachable
Machine, showing my experience in working with AI tools and interactive systems.
From designing APIs to building user-facing features or configuring frameworks, this from turning data
into usable insights—I've done it all.