
Hello!
My name is Fabricio and I build websites. If you want to get to know my work and my personal interests — things I like to keep as close together as possible — the links below will help you. To get in touch, write me an email.
About me & my work
A few more things, in detail
I was born in 1979 in Florianópolis, southern Brazil. As a child, I owned an MSX, where I learned to code in Basic. Then, between 1996 and 2001, I studied Computer Science at the Federal University of Santa Catarina. During this time, witnessing the rise of internet access and drawn to art and design, I became interested in websites and began to build them. I used all the pioneering tools: Dreamweaver, Flash, MySQL, PHP. While I still find WordPress a valuable tool, I’ve been increasingly using JavaScript frameworks and some other tools that are part of the Jamstack architecture. My early passions — HTML and CSS, and designing layouts using pencil and paper — are still going strong.
I prefer jobs involving art, culture, and independent creators. My portfolio is primarily made up of publishers, artists, and galleries. I also enjoy working with science and academic projects. I’d love to work with more social and environmental causes. Are you looking for a web designer/developer and think I can help? I’d really appreciate your contact.
If you want to know more about me, click here.
My favorite hobby, by far, is music. I collect records, go to shows and concerts, read a lot about musicians and their art, and I also like to write down some thoughts about the albums I listen to. To support this writing habit, I keep a blog (in Portuguese, my native language).
I also love literature and poetry. José Saramago, Jorge Luis Borges, Walt Whitman and Wislawa Szymborska are among my favorite writers and poets. I often transcribe passages from the books I read here and recommend readings from the web here.
I share my life with an astronomer. Together, we enjoy exploring the world, going to the beach and hiking in nature. We’ve lived in France, England, and Scotland. Living in Florianópolis is a privilege for those who enjoy the outdoors: we have stunning beaches and trails. We’re currently building a house in a secluded location in the south of the island, where we spend the weekends surrounded by marmosets and toucans and close to the sea.

I also enjoy drawing and illustration. This, however, is a hobby I haven’t been able to dedicate time to, but I can’t wait to get back to my colored pencils, sharpeners and graphite. To find out about some other things that interest me and to visit other personal links, this list and also this one may be helpful.
Experiments & open-source
The websites below have public source code and are available for learning and reuse (links lead to their repositories). They began as research and experimental projects, but are now in production and fully functional.
Final note
Having come this far, you might be missing something… Let me help you: where are the Twitter and Instagram icons? Where’s the link to my Facebook profile? I don’t have them.
If you want to know why, click here.
For the following reasons: having witnessed the emergence of the companies that control these services (and subsequently read the book The Age of Surveillance Capitalism), I understand their operations and their agendas, and this understanding leads me to avoid the intrusion of these big techs into my life as much as possible. I have no illusions about the possibility of being completely independent of them — I use, after all, a Google email address — but it is possible for me, for example, to maintain this website on my own account, as well as my blog — both built with open-source tools, both offering RSS feeds so you can follow me if you wish — and through these independent and open channels, expose to the world what I believe I should present about myself, whether for personal or professional reasons.
In other words, I like the idea of IndieWeb: an internet made by people and not by corporations, where content belongs to its authors and not to big tech companies that, as we know, take advantage of everything they can get their hands on to make addicteds of their users.
Furthermore, as if the harms of social media weren’t enough, their owners have recently been supporting autocrats and turning a blind eye to the content that extremists and neo-fascists around the world publish in their services, thus sabotaging our democracies and making life for many minorities even more difficult. They do so for the advantages of being close to a specific kind of power, which is very convenient for them: one that has no commitment to the collective well-being. And also for the bigger profits that the deregulation of their algorithms guarantees them. If you use these services, reconsider. Contrary to what they want you to believe, they are not essential to life.