## The name is the operating mode

I bought `reboot.md` because I wanted the site to describe the work before a reader reaches the first paragraph.

This is not a portfolio, a polished founder persona, or a generic writing blog. It is a restart log. The extension matters too. Markdown is portable, inspectable, easy to version, easy to feed into other systems, and readable by both people and machines.

## What is being rebooted

The transition is from engineering employment and consulting into product-led businesses.

Consulting has a clean trade: time and judgment for money. That trade can be honest and useful, but it does not automatically produce leverage. Product work is different. It asks for sharper positioning, better distribution, repeated customer discovery, and a willingness to build assets before the market has fully validated them.

`reboot.md` is where I want to make that transition visible.

## Why public

A private notebook is useful for thinking. A public archive is useful for accountability.

Publishing forces compression. It makes vague bets easier to inspect. It creates a trail for future collaborators, customers, readers, and AI agents that need a structured view of what I am building and why.

The goal is not to perform certainty. The goal is to keep a durable record of the decisions, changes, mistakes, and improvements that compound over time.

There is a market reason to do this in public, too. People rarely trust a new product or service from one polished page. They trust accumulated evidence: decisions, tradeoffs, shipped work, mistakes, repairs, and repeated attention to a problem. `reboot.md` gives that evidence a stable home.

## What belongs here

The archive will include build logs, essays, product notes, economics learning, AI workflow experiments, and content traces.

Some entries will be rough. Some will become essays. Some will be useful mainly as provenance for a later product decision. That is acceptable. The archive is the system.

The archive should also make my professional position clearer over time. Not through slogans, but through the pattern of work: customer-aware engineering, product-minded services, AI-assisted systems, and small experiments that test whether useful communities and products can form around real problems.