Prakash Pun
Software Engineer, AI and Data Science Student
I’m a passionate software engineer from Nepal 🇳🇵, dedicated to building innovative solutions and constantly learning new technologies. I enjoy working on diverse projects, from design to research in cutting-edge tech. Currently, I am pursuing a Post-Graduate Degree in Artificial Intelligence and Data Science in Canada 🇨🇦, where I aim to expand my expertise and contribute to the evolving world of AI.
Skills
- Design Tools:
- Figma
- Sketch
- Illustrator
- Development:
- Tailwind CSS
- React
- React Native
- Collaboration:
- Github
- Notion
- Slack
- Google Meet
- Design Expertise:
- UI/UX Design
- Design Systems
- Custom Illustrations
- Responsive Design
- Soft Skills:
- Strong communication
- Problem-solving
- Attention to detail
- Time management
The Path So Far
Places I've worked, things I've built, and the path that brought me here.
IndieHyve
Tech Lead & Software Engineer
IndieHyve started with a question I couldn't stop asking: where do builders go when they want more than a feed? I co-founded it as a community — it became a studio, a product lab, and the work I care about most. I run the engineering, help shape what we build, and put every piece of it together like it's going to last.
Klynto by IndieHyve
Restaurant menu platform — real-time updates and QR code generation.
BlackTech
Software Developer / Frontend
At BlackTech I led the frontend of RestroX, a restaurant management platform that grew to over 2,000 restaurants across Nepal while I was there. It taught me what it feels like to build something that other people depend on — and how differently you make decisions when that weight is real.
A few years earlier, I was still learning what production software really felt like.
Eversoft
Junior Software Developer
My first real taste of production code. Full-stack work across React, React Native, Node.js, GraphQL, and Django — messy and real. Production software teaches you things that no tutorial can prepare you for.
Eversoft
Intern
The first job. I learned to read code I didn't write, work inside a system I didn't design, and ask better questions than I arrived with. The smallest chapter — and the one that started everything.