25 years in tech: what I tell young builders joining HORNO
Three lessons from a quarter-century in IT, blockchain and hardware — written for the engineers and recruiters showing up to build the next decade with us.
25 years in tech: what I tell young builders joining HORNO

I started at 16, fixing motherboards in a back room. I have shipped systems for telcos, banks, defense contractors and two startups that quietly failed. The pattern I've seen, over and over, is this: the engineers who win build for ten years, not ten weeks.
Lesson one — physics is undefeated. Every grand architecture eventually meets bandwidth, heat or human attention spans. Design with those constraints, not against them.
Lesson two — distribution is the product. The best protocol with no community is a museum piece. HORNO Space exists because the social layer is not an afterthought, it is the moat.
Lesson three — be boring with money, ambitious with mission. We pay salaries on time, we file taxes early, we run the company like an adult. That earns us the right to take real swings on the product.

Founder & CEO of HORNO Network. 25+ years in infrastructure, blockchain and hardware. I write — I don't recruit. Read my CEO letters and essays.
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