If yours isn't here, reach out — and it'll get added.
CreaLectrix is a one-person tech company covering five areas: PC hardware, custom software, systems and infrastructure, physical fabrication (3D printing and prototypes), and knowledge transfer (consulting and tutorials). The idea is that most tech problems touch more than one layer — and having someone who understands all of them is more useful than hiring a specialist for each one.
Yes. Matt handles everything directly. That means you talk to the person actually doing the work — not a project manager, not a support queue. It also means capacity is limited, so if you have a time-sensitive project, reach out early.
Every project is quoted individually — there's no fixed price list because the right solution varies too much. Reach out, describe what you need, and you'll get a straight answer on what it'll cost before any work starts. No surprises.
Both. Software, consulting, and systems work can be done entirely remotely. Hardware, repairs, and fabrication typically require in-person or shipping. Based in Melbourne, FL — local clients can do either.
It starts with a conversation about what you're actually going to use it for — not just "gaming" but what games, at what resolution, with what budget. From there comes a parts list with explanation of each choice, a quote, and once approved, sourcing and assembly. Every build is tested and benchmarked before delivery.
Either way works. Sourcing is offered as part of the service — with access to both new retail and the used market, it often results in a better build for the same money. Or bring your own parts and pay for assembly and setup only.
Yes. Bring it in or ship it. Diagnosis happens first — you'll know what's wrong and what it costs to fix before any repair work starts. If it's not worth repairing, that'll be said clearly too.
Start by describing the problem you're trying to solve — not the solution you've already decided on. The best software projects begin with understanding the actual need. From there, a scope and rough timeline can be worked out together before any code is written.
The approach is picking the right tool for the job rather than committing to one stack. Comfortable with Python, JavaScript/TypeScript, PHP, and various web frameworks. For most small-to-medium projects, the stack matters less than the thinking behind it.
Yes. Everything written for your project is yours. The goal is also to leave you with code and documentation that's actually readable and maintainable — not a black box that requires continuous involvement to function.
Depends on the workflow. The honest answer is: AI tools are genuinely useful for some things and oversold for others. The value is in knowing which is which. A consulting session can walk through your actual day-to-day and identify where AI tools provide real leverage — and where they'd just add friction.
Scope varies widely. A simple SQLite database for a small app is a few hours of work. A production Postgres setup with proper backups, indexing, and access control is a larger project. Either way, the goal is something that's set up correctly from the start and explained clearly so you can manage it going forward.
Yes. Prototype design is part of the service. Describe or sketch what you're thinking — or even just explain the problem it needs to solve — and a design can be developed from there. You'll see the model before anything gets printed.
PLA, PETG, and TPU are the primary materials available right now, covering most functional and prototyping use cases. Different materials have different trade-offs in strength, flexibility, heat resistance, and finish — the right choice depends on what the part needs to do.
Laser cutting is on the roadmap but not available yet. If that's what you need, reach out anyway — it helps to know what demand looks like, and you'll be the first to know when it's ready.
Usually a conversation — in person, video call, or async depending on what makes sense. You describe your situation, your tools, and what's frustrating you. The output is honest advice on what to do next, what's actually worth your time, and what isn't. No agenda to sell you more services.
Being built out now. The plan is video content covering practical tech topics — how to actually use AI tools, hardware basics, setting up infrastructure, and more. If there's a specific topic you'd find useful, let us know and it'll move up the list.
Reach out directly — and if it's a good one, it'll end up on this page.