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About

Practical education for the builders of tomorrow

Build With Bipin exists because the gap between tutorials and real engineering is where most learners get stuck — and where the best careers begin.

The mission

Most technical education optimizes for completion, not competence. You finish the course, collect the certificate, and still freeze when facing an empty repository. Build With Bipin takes the opposite approach: you learn Artificial Intelligence and Software Engineering by building real-world projects — with the ambiguity, debugging, and trade-offs that real work involves.

The platform covers the modern stack end to end: Python, machine learning, deep learning, LLMs, retrieval-augmented generation, AI agents, FastAPI, React and Next.js, PostgreSQL, system design, and cloud deployment. Not as isolated topics, but as connected skills that add up to shipping complete systems.

Everything is free and open source. If this platform helps a student in Kathmandu, a career switcher in Berlin, or a working engineer in São Paulo build something they are proud of, it is doing its job.

How we teach

Four principles behind every lesson

Build first, theory second

You remember what you build, not what you watch. Every topic here is taught through a working project, with theory introduced exactly when you need it to move forward.

Fundamentals over frameworks

Frameworks expire; fundamentals compound. The curriculum focuses on the concepts that transfer — data modeling, evaluation, system thinking — so tool churn never resets your progress.

Open source, open process

Every project's code is public, including the messy commits. Seeing how software actually gets built — including the mistakes — is half the education.

Accessible to everyone

No paywalls, no gated content, no certificate upsells. Great engineering education should be limited by your curiosity, not your credit card.

Who is behind this?

Bipin Paudel

Software Engineer & Educator

I'm Bipin — a software engineer who learned the hard way that building is the only teacher that sticks. Build With Bipin is the resource I wish I had when I started: honest about difficulty, focused on fundamentals, and built entirely around real projects. When I'm not writing code or content, I'm usually reviewing community pull requests or answering questions from learners.