Motion as language
Every transition earns its place. Movement reveals intent, hierarchy, and the relationship between things — never decoration.
I'm Zwe Thuta — a frontend-focused full-stack developer building dynamic, user-friendly products with React, Next.js, and a MERN backbone. An architect-turned-engineer who treats every pixel like a blueprint.
I build interfaces that feel considered and run cheap — React product surfaces on the front, Node.js, Express, and MongoDB on the back. I came to code through architecture, and that lineage still shapes how I think about hierarchy, spatial rhythm, and the weight of a single pixel.
Currently reading Computer Science (Hons) at British United College, with side quests through cybersecurity, AI, and Android. Outside of class I'm usually deep inside a React component, a Three.js scene, or a stubborn CSS bug.
Every transition earns its place. Movement reveals intent, hierarchy, and the relationship between things — never decoration.
Cinematic doesn't mean chaotic. Premium interfaces are quiet, generous, and confident in their pacing.
A site that judders is a site that lies. I budget for the slowest device in the room and treat 60fps as a baseline.
What follows is the stack — not as a list, as a sequence of scenes.
Every layout choreographed, every transition deliberate. The stack orbits the work like a gravitational system — React and Next.js at the core, a TypeScript spine, Tailwind shaping the surface.
The scene around you is rendered live — Three.js geometry, soft lighting, a drifting camera. The medium is the message.
The stack as a vertical totem — runtime, transport, ORM, persistence — each layer tethered out as a live readout. Slow sway, scan lines flowing down the face, every layer represented as a real piece of the build.
Real-time transcription. Live meeting minutes. Intelligent summarisation — with the workflow and AssemblyAI and Groq streaming over WebSockets, shipped into IntelliZ AI.
A short reel of recent work — products and portfolios I designed, built, and deployed, mostly solo across the full stack.

AI-powered meeting assistant with real-time transcription, live minutes, and automatic summaries. Upload audio or record live, then get transcripts, key points, decisions, and action items — synced over WebSockets with AssemblyAI under the hood.
A full-featured online marketplace for sellers and buyers — product listings, a dynamic shopping cart, an admin panel, and a seller dashboard for managing inventory end-to-end.

A portfolio site for a graphic designer — built to let the work breathe. Clean typography, restrained motion, and a structure that scales as the body of work grows.
Started in architecture, pivoted into code during the pandemic, and have been building ever since — through self-study, an HNC, an HND, and now an Honours programme. Each stop pushed the same instinct: make things that feel considered, and ship them.
@ British United College
Currently reading advanced Computer Science with a focus on Cybersecurity, AI, and Data Technologies. Exploring Android development on the side and leading an academic computing project aimed at solving real-world problems with practical, opinionated tooling.
@ Info Myanmar College
Deepened my full-stack practice around the MERN stack while branching into data science and big-data visualisation. Final-year project: an AI-driven application built end-to-end, from data plumbing to a React front-end.
@ Info Myanmar College
Laid down the foundations: HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and Java. Spent most of my time on front-end craft — UI/UX, responsive layout, and the small details that decide whether an interface feels considered or careless.
@ Self-directed Study
Taught myself to code during the pandemic — HTML, CSS, JavaScript, then responsive design, modern UI frameworks, and eventually a backend. YouTube tutorials, free courses, and a lot of late-night personal projects.
@ Technology University, Hmawbi
Three years of architecture — AutoCAD, SketchUp, Lumion — training my eye for proportion, spatial rhythm, and the weight of a single line. COVID closed the university, and that detour quietly became the foundation of how I now think about UI.
Open to freelance, full-time, and collaboration on ambitious web work — marketing sites, MERN-stack products, and motion-led experiences. If your team values craft and considered motion, I'd love to hear from you.
zwethuta1998@gmail.com↗Mingaladon, Yangon · Myanmar