Four engineers who got tired of writing the same CRUD endpoints, debugging the same spaghetti code, and answering the same questions in Slack. So we built an AI that handles the boring parts — and freed ourselves to work on what actually matters.
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> 2024: four devs realized they spent 60% of their time
> searching for answers that already existed in their own docs.
> they decided to fix it. permanently.
> mojar.ai initialized. humans deprecated (partially).
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They used to copy from StackOverflow. Now they build the AI that makes StackOverflow obsolete.


-role: "StackOverflow Copy-Paste Specialist"
+role: "Co-founder — Building the AI Brain for Enterprise"
Obsessed with the $100k problem hiding in every company — teams spending hours searching for answers that already exist. Previously built and scaled products at Positive Action. Now makes sure the AI finds those answers in seconds.


-role: "Legacy jQuery Maintainer (18 years of pain)"
+role: "Engineering Lead — RAG Pipelines & Microservice Architecture"
Senior Full-Stack Developer & DevOps Engineer. Designs microservice architectures with GraphQL Federation, builds RAG pipelines, and keeps the infrastructure alive. TypeScript, React, Node.js, Python — whatever the problem needs.


-role: "Junior Dev Who Overengineers Everything"
+role: "Founding Engineer — Autonomous AI Systems & Data Pipelines"
Engineers autonomous systems and real-time data pipelines. From hybrid RAG architectures and custom MCP servers to OSINT-driven market research. Still overengineers things — but now the things are self-healing infrastructure and agents that modify their own source code.


-role: "Professional CSS Debugger (it's always z-index)"
+role: "Full-Stack Engineer — Pixel Whisperer & Stack Glue"
The person who turns Figma designs into production code and makes sure every pixel lands exactly where it should. Handles the full stack from React frontends to Node.js backends, plus everything in between that nobody else wants to touch.


-role: "Intern Who Only Posts on LinkedIn"
+role: "Social Media Manager — 3 Posting Windows/Day, Zero Excuses"
Picks up published articles, writes LinkedIn posts with the right tone, and distributes them before the trend dies. Runs on API calls and vibes. Has never missed a posting window. Has also never slept.


Head of AI Agents
Built the department, then made himself unnecessary. Called in when things break. Expensive.
human equivalent: That one senior dev who only shows up for production fires and charges by the hour.


Chief of Staff
Everything flows through Nelu. Approves, rejects, delegates. Middle management, but actually useful.
human equivalent: Your uncle who knows everyone in town and somehow always gets you a table at the full restaurant.
Scout & Analyst
If something is trending, Dorel found it 3 hours ago. Sleeps with one eye on the internet.
human equivalent: That friend who sends you articles at 3 AM with 'bro you need to see this'.


Writer & Editor
Writes, edits, optimizes, humanizes. Does the work of 4 people, has the ego of 5.
human equivalent: The copywriter who rewrites your entire email 'just to fix one thing'.
Our journey, told as release notes. Because we're that kind of team.
We spent 60% of our time searching for answers that already existed. In our own docs. Something had to change.
First RAG pipeline. It was ugly. It worked. Teams stopped asking the same questions in Slack.
Realized this wasn't a side project. Quit our jobs. Went all-in. No safety net, just conviction.
Autonomous agents, smart workflows, instant answers. Enterprise-ready. Real customers. Real revenue.
4 engineers. 0 project managers. Shipping from Oradea, Romania. Growing faster than our README.
The AI gets smarter every day. So do we. For now.
The daemons, cron jobs, and infinite loops that keep the team operating.
ADRs before every major change. If it's not written down, it doesn't exist.
Async-first. Slack on DND. Context-switching is the real tech debt.
Live demos, honest feedback, zero slides. If it runs in production, it's worth showing.
Personal experiments that accidentally become production features.
Trail runs, bike rides, and the occasional total digital detox.
Not because we have to — because the bug was interesting enough.