

Education:
Academy of Management and Production — major in Law, Bachelor's degree.
Background:
Alexander didn't come to tech through a university — he came through a garage and a soldering iron. He started by building custom PCs from scratch, then moved into the VR industry, got deep into game modding, and eventually launched his own media project: directing, motion capture, original content. Along the way, he made AI tools a part of his daily workflow — for content creation, automation, and creative problem-solving.
That hands-on path led him naturally to teaching. He runs courses on blogging, AI, and media production not from slides, but from real experience. His goal is simple: show kids how technology actually works — and help them move from being users to being creators.
Personal side:
Alexander is just as happy pulling apart a car engine in the garage as he is testing a new AI model. For him, DIY isn't a weekend activity — it's a way of thinking. Understanding how physical things work makes digital things easier to understand too. In his spare time he explores VR, creates original media content, and keeps tabs on everything happening in AI — mostly because he wants to be the first to try it.
"Technology isn't interesting on its own — what's interesting is what you can build with it."

Education:
Academy of Management and Production — major in Law, Bachelor's degree.
Background:
Alexander didn't come to tech through a university — he came through a garage and a soldering iron. He started by building custom PCs from scratch, then moved into the VR industry, got deep into game modding, and eventually launched his own media project: directing, motion capture, original content. Along the way, he made AI tools a part of his daily workflow — for content creation, automation, and creative problem-solving.
That hands-on path led him naturally to teaching. He runs courses on blogging, AI, and media production not from slides, but from real experience. His goal is simple: show kids how technology actually works — and help them move from being users to being creators.
Personal side:
Alexander is just as happy pulling apart a car engine in the garage as he is testing a new AI model. For him, DIY isn't a weekend activity — it's a way of thinking. Understanding how physical things work makes digital things easier to understand too. In his spare time he explores VR, creates original media content, and keeps tabs on everything happening in AI — mostly because he wants to be the first to try it.
"Technology isn't interesting on its own — what's interesting is what you can build with it."

















