
This page is where I keep track of the products, tools, and experiments I’m actively building.
Most of them come from the same place. I run into a workflow that feels more manual, messy, or fragile than it should be, and then I end up building around it. Some of these are further along than others. Some are products I’m actively pushing. Some are smaller tools or experiments that turned into something useful.
Here’s what I’m working on.

Warunex.pl
Warunex is a specialized weather forecasting service for kitesurfers in Poland. It focuses on something simple but important: giving people better local information so they can decide when and where to ride.
I like products like this because they solve a very specific problem for a very specific group of people. They don’t need to be broad to be useful. They just need to be reliable.

CollabPrompts.com
CollabPrompts is an AI prompt management tool for teams. As more teams build real workflows around AI, prompts stop being one-off inputs and start becoming shared assets that need structure, versioning, and reuse.
CollabPrompts is built to make that easier. The goal is to help teams create, organize, and share prompts without turning the whole process into chaos.

UpdateBerry
UpdateBerry is a tool for turning shipped product changes into customer-facing launch assets.
It’s built for founders, PMMs, and small product teams that ship often but don’t always have the time or process to turn those updates into release notes, launch copy, emails, and social posts.
That gap kept showing up for me over and over again. The shipping happened. The work was real. But the communication part lagged behind, or didn’t happen at all. UpdateBerry is my attempt to make that part easier and more repeatable.
If you want more context on why I built it, I wrote about that here: Shipping Faster Wasn’t the Problem.

LinkCherry
LinkCherry is a semantic internal linking app for webflow websites
The broader idea is straightforward: make it easier to work with links, opportunities, and related workflows without turning everything into a spreadsheet mess. It sits in the same category of products I’m drawn to most often: practical tools for operational work.
Why I keep this page updated
I like having one place that shows what I’m actually building, not just what I’ve built in the past.
So if you want to see what I’m working on now, this is the page I’ll keep updating.
If you want to find out how I think about choosing good SaaS ideas, I recommend reading this.