One person and a lot of AI.

I got laid off in a wave of tech layoffs. Instead of job hunting, I started building. I'd been watching AI tools get more powerful every week, and I kept thinking:

"This is incredible, but who has time to keep up?"

Not me. And probably not you.

Every week there's a new model, a new framework, a new "game-changing" tool. If you're not a full-time AI engineer, you're already behind. That's exhausting.

So I built Little Helpers. The idea is simple:

You tell us what you need help with. We build AI that handles it. When the tools change — and they will — we swap them out. Your preferences stay. Your workflows stay. You never have to think about it.

I'm not a big company. I'm a builder who got tired of watching good technology stay inaccessible to normal people.

The bet.

Here's what I believe:

The best AI stack today won't be the best AI stack in six months. The companies selling you "the AI solution" are selling you today's technology bolted to a subscription.

When something better comes along, they have no incentive to switch you over. They built their business on the current thing.

I built Little Helpers to be the opposite:

I don't care which model runs your helpers. I don't care which framework powers them. I care that your helpers work, that they get better, and that you never have to rebuild anything when the ground shifts.

That's the deal: you trust me to pick the right tools. I earn that trust by keeping things working.

What's under the hood, plainly.

Little Helpers runs on open-source AI tools hosted on dedicated infrastructure. Each user gets their own machine. Your data stays on your machine.

I combine the best available tools, configure them for your needs, and keep them updated. When better tools come along, I migrate your setup — preserving everything you've built.

I'm building in public. If you're curious about the technical details, the decisions, or the roadmap, I share all of it.

Want to try it?

Or say hi — I actually read every message.