Topic · Writing
Building Globally.
Building across borders — from Ivano-Frankivsk to Rzeszów to the United States. Immigration (EB1A), market entry, accelerators, and operating a company that lives in two continents at once.
7 posts
019 MIN·UPDATED · JUN 2026Why I'm Building Oswin AI, My Next Company, in the US
After a decade building Dronehub from Europe, I founded Oswin AI in 2026 at the AI-robotics intersection in the US. Here is the reasoning.
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029 MIN·UPDATED · JUN 2026Running One Company Across Two Continents Without Breaking It
How I run a single deep-tech company across Poland and the US: what to centralize, what to localize, and why automation, not heroics, holds it together.
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039 MIN·UPDATED · JUN 2026US vs EU for Deep-Tech: Where to Build, Raise, Sell
A practitioner's framework for deep-tech founders: don't pick a continent, assign functions. Build R&D in Europe; raise growth capital and sell in the US.
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048 MIN·UPDATED · JUN 2026Two Words of Polish: The Immigrant Founder's Path
I arrived in Poland knowing two words of Polish and built a hardware company anyway. An honest account of language, isolation, debt, and persistence.
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058 MIN·UPDATED · JUN 2026Why I Built a Hardware Company in Poland's Aviation Valley
A Ukrainian founder on why southeastern Poland's Aviation Valley around Rzeszow became the place to build serious deep-tech hardware.
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068 MIN·UPDATED · JUN 2026Entering the US Market via GENIUS NY: A Founder's Path
How my European deep-tech company made its first US market entry through GENIUS NY in Syracuse, New York — what an accelerator gave a hardware startup, and what it didn't.
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078 MIN·UPDATED · JUN 2026The EB1A Green Card: Inside a 1,300-Page Application
My approved 2024 EB1A green card ran about 1,300 pages. It is won on a documented body of work — awards, judging, a patent, expert letters — not a job offer.
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