Hi! I'm Sarat, glad you're here. Asymmetrica is a small AI agency based out of Goa. We currently have two products of our own — Ananta, a Telegram-based assistant for everyday knowledge and document work, and AsymmFlow, an ERP/CRM built for the industrial instrumentation use case — and we also do bespoke software builds for clients when the problem's interesting enough. Please feel free to contact me for any software needs, or if you just want to solve an interesting problem together.
The origin story
I started coding from zero at 5:30 AM on May 15, 2025. A random Reddit post about Replit did it. I'd been trying to build a party game called "Strangers After Hours" using AI for a few days prior, and the day I found Replit, it just… worked. Four hours in, I was hooked forever. Never looked back.
What I'm actually thinking about
If you checked my YouTube history and phone tabs right now, you'd find an odd mix — math, science, AI, software, computer science, gaming, and a lot of music. I'm mostly interested in three things:
- Making AI actually useful for underserved demographics and native-language audiences.
- I'm shameless about where I find patterns to solve problems. Ancient mathematical frameworks (Indian, Babylonian, Chinese, Ubuntu — you name it, there's a good chance I've already tried to work with it), complexity theory, physics, chemistry, information theory — any discipline with a paradigm worth applying to computation is fair game for me. I learn by applying and experimenting with things in production code, not just by reading papers about them.
- Democratization of knowledge and intelligence.
I have a line I fall back on when trying to explain how I work: I think of myself as an electrician equivalent of sorts. I may not fully understand electricity, but I know how to work with the wires to light up a room. AI lets you explore your imagination by passing on the complexity of learning all the jargon and syntax to it. I leverage that fully and unapologetically.
What I'm still learning
Frontend. Still picking up the jargon — it's tougher for me than backend work. I also can't yet explain quaternions properly, or Vedic mathematics, even though I work with both every day — I get by through pattern recognition, first principles, and validating with rigorous frameworks. I know I need to learn them the proper way, if for no other reason, just so I can explain what's in my head to both humans and AI better.
Who I'm building for
When I picture someone using Ananta and it actually helps — I'm usually picturing people who have trouble with complicated interfaces and convoluted flows. For tech to be useful, it has to be easy to understand and easy to use. I think of people like my mother. She was smart, capable, and full of imagination, but she didn't know English — and it always arrested her potential. I think AI offers the first real opportunity to bridge that gap in an intelligent way. The real opportunity in software is building for the underserved and solving problems at scale.
The rest of me
I wake up around 4:30–5 AM, do the Reddit / X / YouTube round, then get to work. I live in t-shirts and shorts. My wife asks me "why are you like this?" and "who made you like this?" multiple times a day — and she's usually right to.
If any of this sounds like your kind of thing, reach me at sarat@asymmetrica.ai. I answer my own email.