I’m a software engineer based in Athens with over 20 years of experience building backend systems. I’ve worked across learning platforms, reservation engines, marketplaces, and e-commerce. Software architecture is where I focus most of my technical energy. I design systems that can handle real-world complexity, adapt under pressure, and stay reliable when traffic spikes or requirements shift without warning.
These days, I’m working on TalentLMS with a solid team, building systems that serve actual business needs and can hold up over time. I lead development teams, deal with integrations that should be simple but never are, and handle the kind of technical work that keeps projects stable, maintainable, and moving forward when things get complicated.
I’m a software engineer based in Athens with over 20 years of experience building backend systems. I’ve worked across learning platforms, reservation engines, marketplaces, and e-commerce. Software architecture is where I focus most of my technical energy. I design systems that can handle real-world complexity, adapt under pressure, and stay reliable when traffic spikes or requirements shift without warning.
These days, I’m working on TalentLMS with a solid team, building systems that serve actual business needs and can hold up over time. I lead development teams, deal with integrations that should be simple but never are, and handle the kind of technical work that keeps projects stable, maintainable, and moving forward when things get complicated.
A behind-the-scenes look at the large-scale refactoring of TalentLMS, a learning management platform with deep roots and tight constraints.
This talk covers how we tackled deeply embedded technical debt while keeping the system live and teams shipping. It walks through the architectural shifts we made, from monolith to modulith, and the cultural shifts that made those changes possible.
Alongside code, we had to refactor trust, habits, and communication. Equal parts technical and human, this is a story about moving forward without breaking what still works.