At the intersection of technology and theatricality — building digital humans, shipping software, and running the occasional 140.6 for fun.
Tyler is a technology evangelist who genuinely believes customer experience is a brand moment — whether you manage it or not. He has spent the last seven years at UneeQ building the operating system for digital humans: AI agents that communicate with emotion, personality, and brand authenticity.
Before that: SAP, a bootstrapped field-service startup still running 13 years later, a stint shipping Ruby, and a passport that has seen the inside of fifty countries. He lives in Dallas with his family, commutes by bicycle when he can, and owes his sanity to long rides, Japanese stoicism, and the fact that AI is, in fact, a superpower.
The short version: I help organizations transform customer experiences through conversational AI and digital humans — because every customer interaction is a brand moment, whether you manage it or not.
Most companies investing in automation aim at chatbots — addressing maybe 7% of the communication problem. Adding emotion and personality through digital humans changes that equation entirely.
My work sits at the intersection of AI, emotional intelligence, and brand experience. I bridge the technical and commercial worlds — architecture one minute, negotiating a contract the next, writing integration code at midnight because the demo is tomorrow.
On any given weekend I am on two wheels, or on a single fiberglass plank, or spectacularly between them. All of it counts as research into what the body will negotiate with.
They both punish the person who skips the boring reps. They both reward the person who shows up when it is raining.
The hours add up. The kids notice. That's the whole scoreboard.
Visas, stamps, red-eyes, and long dinners. Travel taught me that most problems are less interesting than the people you meet solving them.
I lived in Japan, in Hawaii, and in the continental U.S. The Japanese language is a gift that keeps giving (and confusing).
Chatbots address maybe 7% of the communication problem. The rest — tone, pacing, eye contact, warmth, the tiny signals that say I'm listening — that's where digital humans live, and that's where the real brand moment happens.
Available for keynotes, podcasts, panels, and the occasional classroom. Bilingual sessions welcome.
Field Harmony is a complete field-service platform for appliance repair companies — dispatch with GPS-routed scheduling, a mobile technician app that works offline in a basement, on-site payment processing, parts management with exploded diagrams, professional invoicing with custom branding, and reporting that tells you per-job profit margin down to the screw.
I built it thirteen years ago and have been running it ever since. Bootstrapped. Profitable. Quietly growing. It's the project that taught me the difference between solving a real problem well and chasing rounds — and why I still believe constraint is the most under-appreciated business advantage in software.
The customers aren't hypothetical: independent repair shops and growing service companies across the US, running their entire operation — from first call to collected payment — inside one app.
Finlity is a self-hosted portfolio tracker and retirement planner I built for the question most tools wave off: will my money last? It runs on your own machine — nothing leaves your device — and layers professional-grade analytics on top of a 10,000-run Monte Carlo engine with black-swan and golden-swan modeling.
Drop in a CSV from Schwab, Fidelity, or Vanguard and it sorts itself into the right accounts. Then ask the hard questions: withdrawal rates at 65, 70, 75. Concentration drift across sectors. Sharpe, Sortino, VaR, CVaR, beta against the S&P. The scenarios an advisor will charge you to run — and probably won't run honestly.
Built in Python and FastAPI with an extensible plugin system so anyone can add a new brokerage importer, a custom risk metric, or a dashboard widget. Self-hosted by design.
Pushing on-prem deployments, lowering latency on real-time LLM → TTS → avatar pipelines, and finding the seams where emotion can actually be measured.
Cycling through the Texas winter, snowboarding when the snow will have me, and quietly eyeing another long-course race on the calendar.
A steady diet of papers on multimodal agents, a worn copy of something in Japanese I will never finish, and footnotes leading to more footnotes.