My work sits at the intersection of product, AI, engineering, and execution. I operate primarily as a knowledge worker: designing systems, directing AI-assisted development workflows, reviewing architecture and code, and leading the delivery of technology products from concept to production.
My work involves helping companies in the areas of innovative Product Development, recently with the usage of (generative) AI.
Today, a significant part of my work involves orchestrating AI systems to accelerate software engineering, analysis, and decision-making, while maintaining the judgment, technical rigor, and product thinking required to ship reliable systems at scale. In some cases, I work directly without AI; in others, I use AI as a force multiplier.
My experience spans product development, AI engineering, technical strategy, project leadership, and operational execution. Across all of it, the common thread is an obsession with building things properly — systems, products, workflows, and organizations that are both functional and durable.
Beyond industry work, I am deeply interested in teaching, writing, and synthesizing ideas across technology, physics, systems, and human behavior. I write both technical and reflective work, ranging from engineering and AI to essays, fiction, and sometimes I experiment with writing poetry.
I founded The Double Eye, where I advise and collaborate on AI, product, engineering, and technology initiatives.
Contact: christos@doubleeye.xyz
I also publish technical and conceptual writing through the substack "The Graph".
I am a physicist with a doctorate in Experimental Nanotechnology, and much of my thinking is shaped by experimentation itself: forming hypotheses, testing ideas, observing outcomes, and iterating quickly. I am particularly fascinated by the philosophy behind "Tiny Experiments" and "Deep Work" the ideas that meaningful progress often emerges from small, focused experiments rather than rigid long-term plans.
Occasionally, I write essays, fiction, and poems elsewhere. Writing, to me, is not only a form of communication, but a mechanism for extending perception — a way to inhabit multiple worlds, lives, and possibilities within a single lifetime.