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@Aadil

D.FACE

I explore security, automation, OSINT, and hardware by building small experiments under real constraints.

This site is my personal workspace for projects, experiments, and learnings.



WHAT I WORK ON

Offensive Security

Understanding how systems fail through hands-on testing and controlled exploitation.

Automation & Tooling

Building scripts and workflows to reduce manual effort and repetitive tasks.

Hardware & Low-level Experiments

Exploring constrained devices, USB behavior, and physical system limits.

Edge Cases & Behavior

Observing system behavior at edges, limits, and unintended paths.

What I build is shaped by limits.

I focus on real constraints like limited control, time, or hardware.

I learnt finishing small experiments over chasing large unfinished ideas.

I document what breaks and what changes my thinking.

DEPLOYMENTS

Blogs

BLOG_ENTRY: 01

ATtiny Payload Core

BLOG_ENTRY: 02

Morse Strip (Coming Soon)

Im Aadil

I work around security, automation, OSINT, and hardware, driven mainly by curiosity about how systems behave under real-world constraints. I tend to learn by building small things, breaking them, and paying attention to what fails, rather than following predefined paths or structured curricula.

My academic background is in humanities — a choice I made primarily to keep flexibility and time for independent exploration. While my education on paper isn’t technical, most of my learning has happened outside formal coursework through hands-on experimentation, self-directed projects, and continuous iteration.

I’m particularly drawn to working under constraints: limited memory, limited hardware, limited time. These limits often force deeper understanding and more intentional design choices. Instead of chasing large, unfinished ideas, I prefer finishing small experiments and reflecting on what worked, what didn’t, and why my assumptions were wrong.

This site exists as a personal workspace and archive. It’s a place to document finished projects, ongoing experiments, and notes that capture changes in my thinking. It’s not meant to be a tutorial platform or a résumé, but a record of how my understanding evolves through practical work.

I’m continuing to explore both software and hardware paths, refining my approach as I go. Over time, this space will grow as a reflection of that process — shaped by what I build, what breaks, and what I learn from it.