About |
I am a Full Stack Software Engineer specializing in low-code development, with a strong focus on building secure, scalable applications using Quickbase and cloud-integrated automation platforms. My background spans from WordPress deployments to business systems, giving me a unique perspective on how people interact with technology at scale. For nearly 4 years, I have led the development of production-grade Quickbase applications used by multi-state field teams, engineered API integrations across cloud services like AWS, Trello and Zapier and delivered automation workflows that cut operational overhead by over 20%. My work consistently emphasizes collaboration, user-centric interfaces and real-time reporting to empower decision-makers and ground teams alike. I am particularly interested in roles blending application development, business process automation and platform interoperability. My current toolbox includes Quickbase (Pipelines, Webhooks, APIs, Dashboards), JavaScript, React, Python, SQL and platforms like Power Platform and Zapier. I also maintain a private homelab where I prototype integrations with self-hosted LLMs and AI-driven tooling for workflow intelligence. I am actively seeking opportunities where I can grow as a low-code engineer and automation architect. My goal is to design systems that simplify complexity, reduce manual effort and expand access to reliable, high-performing technology. |
Location | United States Of America |
Website | www.linkedin.com/in/bernhoftbret |
Posts | 230 |
Joined | |
Last Active | |
Site Role | Member |
Favourite philosophers | Alan Watts, Joseph Campbell, Manly P. Hall and Carl Jung |
Favourite quotations | "Everything around you that you call life, was made up by people who were no smarter than you. And you can change it. And you can influence it. You can build your own things that other people can use. And the minute that you understand that you can poke life, that if you push in, something will pop out the other side. That you can change it. That you can mold it. That's maybe the most important thing." - Steve Jobs |