Hey there, I'm —

Bimo.

Adhimas Aryo Bimo  ·  Indonesia

AI / ML Engineer
Data Scientist
Software Engineer
Informatics Engineering student @ ITB '23

An ITB student deeply enthusiastic about all three — still learning, always building.

about

about.

how it started

“I didn't start with answers.

I started with confusion —

and the urge to figure things out.”

driven by

complexity.

I've always been drawn to things I don't fully understand.

Not because they're easy,

but because they force me to think deeper.

Somewhere inside every complex problem,

there's a structure waiting to be uncovered.

perspective shift

Over time, I stopped seeing problems as obstacles.

I started seeing them as systems —

things that can be broken apart,

understood piece by piece,

and rebuilt into something that works.

Not perfectly.

But meaningfully.

Right now, I'm exploring AI.

Not just how it works —

but where it fails,

where it adapts,

and where it actually becomes useful.

I care less about the hype,

and more about building something that runs,

scales,

and makes sense.

build.

Most of what I know,

I learned by building.

And most of what I built

didn't work the first time.

Sometimes I wasn't ready.

Sometimes I had no idea what I was doing.

But I started anyway.

Because waiting doesn't make you ready —
doing does.

a belief I've held for a long time

Dreams are the fuel of life.

And dreams don't die —

unless you let them.

among millions chasing something bigger

there's me —

Adhimas Aryo Bimo.

Not the most talented.

Not the fastest.

But someone who kept going,

even when things didn't work out.

on failure

I've failed more times than I can count.

Projects that didn't finish.

Ideas that didn't land.

Moments where I was close —

but not close enough.

Still, I kept going.

Because failure never felt like the end

just a sign that I was getting closer.

I'm not chasing perfection. I'm chasing clarity.

Clarity in how I think.

Clarity in how systems work.

Clarity in what I choose to build.

And someday,

I want to build things

that don't just work —

but actually matter.