Your app works on localhost. Great. But how do you get it live? With a domain, HTTPS, a database that doesn't vanish, and someone to call when it breaks.
Cursor, Claude Code, Bolt, Lovable — you built an app in a weekend. But now you're standing there with a working project and no idea how to get it into the real world.
I deploy your web app on solid infrastructure in the Netherlands. Domain, DNS, HTTPS, database with backups, security — all taken care of.
Built an iOS or Android app? I handle certificates, signing, screenshots, store listings, and the review process. Also updates and new builds.
Connect Stripe, set up OAuth, integrate a third-party API, or build that one thing you can't quite get Claude to do right. Targeted work on specific features.
Hosting on Dutch infrastructure with monitoring, automated backups, security updates, uptime alerts, and support when something breaks.
Deployment failures, database issues, performance problems, DNS troubleshooting, or the classic: "it works locally but not in production."
I'm not a developer who learned some DevOps. I'm an infrastructure engineer who also builds apps with AI tools.
I run my own network with a personal Autonomous System. I built MailShield and eSIM op reis using Claude Code — deployed on my own infrastructure. I've been managing servers, networks, and hosting for over 15 years.
When you hand me your project, I understand both sides: what you built and what it needs to run properly.
Next.js, React, Node.js, Python, Go, PHP, static sites — if it runs in a container or on a server, I can deploy it.
Yes. I set up automated deployments from your GitHub or GitLab. You push, it deploys.
On Dutch infrastructure that I own and manage. Not a hyperscaler, not a shared host. Dedicated resources, proper backups, and someone who actually answers when you have a question.
That's fine. Send me your repo, I'll review it and tell you what needs to happen. No charge for the initial assessment.
Then we scale. More resources, load balancing, CDN — whatever you need. You won't have to migrate to a different provider.
Send me your repo or describe what you've built. I'll tell you what it takes.