Kelvin

Kelvin

@kelvin

Founder

Developer Author

About

My name is Kelvin Wuite, I am the original founder of Accelerated Software Development B.V.. Since 2008, I have operated as a connective layer between business development, product owners, and engineering teams. In that role, I have repeatedly seen strong ideas struggle under unnecessary complexity, fragmented tooling, and misaligned communication. At the same time, I have experienced how powerful it becomes when people from different disciplines truly understand each other and are able to build together. I consider myself a builder in the broadest sense. Whether I work with physical materials or with software, containers, and infrastructure, the act of creating is central to who I am. Technology is not the goal; it is the instrument that allows ideas to take shape. What motivates me most is seeing an abstract idea take shape and become something real and useful. With ASD, I focus on building systems that remove translation layers between disciplines. Instead of explaining work through documentation, calls, or handovers, engineers should be able to directly interact with running systems, data, and services. The closer people are to the actual execution, the faster understanding, trust, and progress emerge. ASD is built around that principle: creating environments where collaboration happens through shared reality rather than abstract descriptions—aligned with European values such as sovereignty, transparency, and sustainability, and designed for a world where AI becomes part of everyday engineering work.

What Drives Me

I am driven by collaboration without boundaries, where people can create, work together, and stay in control no matter where they are or what device they use. I believe in open source freedom, better use of existing hardware, and empowering small players alongside large ones. As people increasingly direct artificial intelligence as an extension of their own thinking and creativity, I want to make creation accessible even from a mobile phone and help bring the world closer together through shared, human-centered technology.

Looking Ahead

I see ASD evolving into a decentralized network, with much of its technology becoming open source over time. Cloud infrastructure will increasingly act as a coordination layer — routing, tunneling, fallback — while computation and ownership move closer to people and their devices. ASD will enable direct, temporary, and verifiable connections between devices: sharing data, running services, or even hosting personal and social systems without centralized storage. AI will become more personal and more distributed, and these agents will need reliable ways to communicate. As software creation shifts toward building directly where systems run, traditional CI/CD pipelines will shrink. You move to the environment, create the service, and leave behind a working system. ASD's role is to make that model practical, secure, and accessible, giving people more freedom to create in an increasingly networked world.

Publications