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2 min read
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Jorge Eithan Treviño Selles
Welcome to My Blog
First post on my new portfolio site - a brief introduction to what you can expect here
¡Hola! Welcome to my corner of the internet
I’m excited to finally have this space up and running. After months of planning and building, here we are.
What you’ll find here
This blog will be a mix of topics I’m passionate about:
- Cloud & Network Engineering: Deep dives into Kubernetes, GCP, networking architectures, and infrastructure automation
- Cybersecurity: Pentesting insights, security best practices, and lessons learned from CTF competitions
- AI & Robotics: Projects involving LLMs, RAG systems, embedded AI, and IoT
- Marathon Running: Training strategies, race reports, and the parallels between endurance sports and engineering
- Leadership: Reflections from leading IEEE UNAM and managing multidisciplinary teams
A bit about my approach
I believe in learning by doing and teaching what you learn. Most posts here will be:
- Technical but accessible: I’ll explain complex topics in a way that’s useful for both beginners and experts
- Practical: Real-world examples, code snippets, and actionable insights
- Honest: What worked, what didn’t, and what I learned from failures
The tech behind this site
This portfolio is built with:
- Hugo for the static site generation (fast, secure, no Node.js needed)
- Custom CSS/JS with a minimalista técnico aesthetic
- GitHub Pages for hosting (zero-carbon footprint for me)
- Django API (coming soon) for comments, running on my home NAS
There are also a few easter eggs hidden around the site. If you’re reading this in the browser console… you’re already on the right track 😏
What’s next?
I’m currently working on:
- Multilingual support (Español, English, Deutsch)
- Comment system with moderation capabilities
- GitHub integration for showcasing projects dynamically
- More content about my experiences at Cisco Meraki and IEEE
Stay tuned, and feel free to reach out if you want to chat about any of these topics!
“If you’re not running, the wall catches you” — applies to both marathons and debugging.
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