5B4APB — Cyprus · KM65
IT Security Engineer & RF Specialist
I work at the intersection of hardened digital infrastructure and analog radio. Security by profession, signal by passion — let’s DX.
Amateur Radio
Licensed operator since 2019. SSB voice and analog modes only — no automated digital protocols. I like to be romantic that way.
IT Security Engineering
Protecting critical digital infrastructure through network defense, hardened architectures, and threat mitigation. Security-first thinking across the full system lifecycle.
Muay Thai
Training in the art of eight limbs as a discipline of focus, conditioning, and mental resilience. If you are down for sparring I am in.
About me
I’ve always been the kind of person who needs to stay active — mentally and physically. Whether it’s architecting secure systems, diagnosing a stubborn RF issue, or pushing through a hard Muay Thai session, I’m drawn to challenges that demand focus, discipline, and the will to keep improving.
My path into technology started in 1998, when I got my first computer at the age of seven. What began as childhood curiosity — wanting to understand how things work and how to make them work better — eventually led me into IT security, where protecting infrastructure became not just a profession, but a way of thinking. I approach every system with the same question: where is it vulnerable, and how do we harden it?
Amateur radio came later, but it stuck fast. It sits at a rare intersection of physics, engineering, and raw human connection — no apps, no algorithms, just a signal travelling thousands of kilometres through the ionosphere to reach another person. Through Amateur Radio, I’ve spoken to operators across the globe, made genuine friends along the way, and found a community that shares the same quiet obsession with the craft. Amateur Radio is where these worlds meet — technology, signal, and the mindset of a person who is never quite done learning.
Muay Thai rounded it all out, though not by grand design. I needed a way to exercise intensively and it just happened — but once you’re in, you’re in. The gym turned out to be the perfect place to burn off the mental load of a day spent in front of screens.
