Hello, welcome!
This is the space where I share ideas, techniques, hobbies, and writings that I have collected over many years working with and studying technology and communication.
The name Techno.Terium reflects the spirit of this place: “Techno” comes from technique and technology — the human craft, ingenuity, and applied reasoning. “Terium” suggests a territory, a domain, a space. Together, they form what could be understood as a “territory of technique” — a personal laboratory where I store knowledge, experiments, and curiosities.
I have a strong interest in Advaita Philosophy (Non-Duality), Masonic Symbolism, and above all, the art of communication — whether through words, images, sound, or systems.
I believe that books, films, photographs, and music are also powerful ways of transmitting knowledge. Each medium carries its own method of registering and interpreting human experience.
Since early humans first recorded their impressions on stone walls, the techniques of communication have never stopped evolving. From the handwritten era to mechanical typography, from the age of electricity with radio and telegraphy, and eventually to the digital age of television, computers, networks, and finally the internet.
It is fascinating to see how each technological leap enabled the next. Today, we carry in our pockets machines far more powerful than the high-end workstations of the 1990s — true portable multimedia stations. Something unimaginable a few decades ago.
There is also a small “web museum” on this site, containing old websites I created over the years.
Micro Boards — the company founded by my father, where I worked for 20 years — shaped much of my path. I spent those years deeply involved with computing: PC maintenance, video-editing workstations, networks, handhelds, and PDAs. Much of what I know today comes from that experience.