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When I sat down to speak with Jermaine Ee from HeirLight, I expected a conversation about software, startups, and maybe a bit about AI. What I didn’t expect was how much it would challenge the way I think about why we build things in the first place.
Jermaine is a non-technical founder by background, but that label almost feels misleading. He understands systems, architecture, and product trade-offs deeply—just without writing code himself. What stood out to me immediately was that he didn’t arrive at software because he wanted to build software. He arrived there because he wanted to solve a human problem.
That distinction matters more now than it ever has.
By Krish Palaniappan and Varun Palaniappan5
55 ratings
When I sat down to speak with Jermaine Ee from HeirLight, I expected a conversation about software, startups, and maybe a bit about AI. What I didn’t expect was how much it would challenge the way I think about why we build things in the first place.
Jermaine is a non-technical founder by background, but that label almost feels misleading. He understands systems, architecture, and product trade-offs deeply—just without writing code himself. What stood out to me immediately was that he didn’t arrive at software because he wanted to build software. He arrived there because he wanted to solve a human problem.
That distinction matters more now than it ever has.

668 Listeners