Made this page because I thought it’d be cool to have a list of all my tiniest projects.
Made a bot for little group chats. Every day the bot asks a question: “Who is most likely to...?”⸻and lets the friends vote for each other. I spent a couple of hours, mostly to get fun and natural questions from Claude.
Made an app where you can generate and send valentines for programmers (on algorithm and C++ themes). Designed by hand & vibecoded in a week⸻after three years of postponing the idea.
Made a beautiful version of our current timetable because my friends wanted to hang it on a wall. The technical challenge I set for myself was to fit all years’ courses in one table.

Made the official project site for our uni program. Being given creative freedom, crafted a clean technical UI leaning to brutalism (especially on the search pages!)

Attempted to brainrotify academic articles to make them more engaging. Cursed but fun project. Co-authored with Nika.
Made first experiments in hosting a podcast. The bottleneck points for now are: video editing taking a lot of time and lack of experience in hosting & speaking on camera.
On JetBrains hackathon, connected Figma to IntelliJ with its in-IDE agent. We were busy for two days, and the main component started working in some moment. Hopefully I will make a post about it.
Wrote a book on developing Telegram bots, which was a rework of my Telegram Bot Handbook, which in turn was a rework of my old long article. At some point the project became too ambitious, so after many months of iterating, I had to publish what I had.

For a coursework, needed to combine TTS/STT/LLM technologies to create a voice assistant. Went a little further and integrated it into online calls.
Now semi-regular conference on the randomest things. Nika & I invite people to talk about anything they find awesome but don’t have a chance to talk about normally. We work on ~vibes~, safe atmosphere, announcements and pictures, video recording, etc.
Joined a fandom of Disco Elysium and made a tool they didn’t think they needed. Hehe. My largest project at that time.
A tutorial and a repo for wrapping a static site into a FastAPI application. I think it became an interesting read because of being concise and punchy (plus a catchy heading and usefulness, of course). Will do again.
Designed fancy presentations for some course projects I defended.
в машине отсутствует ПНЕВМА подмешанная в matériel du monde против воли ДЕМИУРГА. поэтому она максимум может стать актуарным големом, для того чтобы она научилась думать нужно провести оккультный ритуал по пересадке души младенца в процессор Intel Xeon EP-2609 описанный в стихе ██:██ Book of Revelations
A single place for all the notes and materials from our study courses. Made a pretty site with cool technical solutions, but didn’t manage to support it longer than several months.

Started an archive of funny bugs and strange UIs.
Started a closed community. Experimenting with the formats.
Designed a logo for a safe and efficient problem testing system.
Made a bot that creates emojis out of user avatars⸻yet another UX experiment with the platform mechanics.
Made a digital preparation sheet based on the materials from our cool teacher. Tried to implement gesture navigation for mobile, which didn’t came out as I expected, but was ok.
Created a closed blog for friends and people I know. Tried shitposting but occasionally couldn’t help posting longer texts. In a couple of years, got used to share thoughts about things I enjoy.
Printed a bunch of memes about our school class. It was the peak of my humor.
Started this project as a UX experience: what if we provide the user with the whole power of Python in Telegram, integrated? It can be made flexible and easy to use on the go. Turned out fun.
Was toying around with LLMs and UX. (Yes, this is an LLM project from 2021!) Made a webpage where you can scroll to generate the text further; unfortunately, it was too slow to be usable.
Managed the school’s humor social media for a while, with a couple of friends.
Automatically uploaded the full Smeshariki animated series to a Telegram channel because... I wanted to send friends the episodes as memes in funny contexts? Eventually some kids started finding this and subscribing. A couple of years later, when the channel had 900-1000 subscribers, I got a copyright infringement notice :3
Made a logo for my friend’s class who studied maths and IT.
Made a bot for hacker images. Send a line a get an ironic hacker picture with this line. 10/10, using it to this day.
Came up with a clever way to combine Telegram mechanics: made a bot that turns every message in your channel into a todo list. Later made a tutorial post out of it.
Wanted to create a smart system to choose board games, but stopped at a small catalog utilizing Tesera API.
Made the first and shy version of this site. And there were many iterations to come. I think I should showcase this evolution sometime!
Let me put all sticker packs I created over the years under a single category here. At the time of writing in 2026, we have: a collection of distorted vector animations with 12K installations, quotes of programming Olympiad folks with 2.7K installations, philosophical memes with 47 installations but demanding more because they are so good, and many stickers with local memes etc.
Made a bot who aimed to replace googling when chatting: it showed a brief description of a thing. The bot was based on the DuckDuckGo API, and I wanted to combine more tools, but never did.
Made a custom pretty client to an ugly testing system. Even used it on the programming classes for some time.
Adapted a card game as a bot: players have to quickly name a word of a given category on a given letter. It was an attempt to create a fun group experience in chats.
A bot for searching other bots! With Vanuta and Anton, we combined some cool technology (we had userbots pinging bots to track if they’re alive). I think we used to have 20 daily active users.
Made a console program that generated random languages. Actually, it was creating random strings and remembering them.
Started a small community of students who like IT and gadgets, made friends, and ruined the community in a few years.
In Figma, designed pictures for group chats, networks of groups chats, channels, bots, sometimes people.