HWAH Hacker Panel
See how real builders are using AI, automation, and modern tools to think through today’s biggest questions in tech.
Join Headwraps & Hacks (HWAH) for a live webinar. Topic TBD.
HWAH Hacker Panels bring together hackers, meaning builders, tinkerers, and problem-solvers, for thoughtful conversations about how technology is actually being used across real workflows, teams, and environments.
What to expect
This is a live, discussion-based webinar featuring a special guest and focused conversation around a timely topic in technology.
You can expect:
insight into the why, who, what, and how behind real systems and decisions
a conversation grounded in practical examples, not just hot takes
multiple perspectives on how people are approaching the same challenge across different tools, roles, and industries
What We'll Explore
— SAVE THE DATE —
Our next topic and guest are TBD
Who this is for
Best suited for Hackers (tech enthusiasts and every day professionals experimenting with software).
This includes:
builders working with automation, APIs, AI, or modern software tools
operators and founders designing internal systems
professionals curious about how technology is being applied in real work environments
Hosted by
Enoma Osakue (Stackrie)
Enoma Osakue is a systems engineer and tech consultant based in Brooklyn, NY. She's a digital native with over 20 years of experience in web platforms and software, she founded Stackrie. Her work sits at the intersection of operations, technology adoption, and workflow design for small teams that need to operate at a high level of efficiency.
Blessing Richardson (Sayla)
Blessing Richardson is an AI and tech strategist and founder of Sayla, with over a decade of experience building digital tools and helping founders and operators use automation and AI to scale their work more effectively.
About HWAH
Headwraps & Hacks (HWAH) is a community for builders and adopters of technology.
We focus on how technology is actually used.
Not just what tools exist, but how people are applying them in real environments.
Most tech events just talk about what’s possible.
HWAH is built around real thinking, real use cases, and real people showing you what’s already working.