Welcome to HackerNoon’s Meet the Writer Interview series, where we learn a bit more about the contributors that have written some of our favorite stories.
So let’s start! Tell us a bit about yourself. For example, name, profession, and personal interests.
My name is Marius Eugen Vomir. I’m from Romania, and I created Smart Home Cinema, a local-first voice-controlled movie system for Windows.
I’m interested in technology that removes everyday friction in a simple and reliable way. Most of what I care about sits at the intersection of automation, media playback, voice control, and user experience.
I’m especially drawn to systems that make technology feel more natural, more predictable, and easier to live with in everyday use.
Interesting! What was your latest Hackernoon Top Story about?
My latest HackerNoon story was about building a voice-controlled home cinema system for Windows.
What pushed me toward it was the feeling that people who watch movies from local libraries were left behind when it comes to comfort. Streaming platforms made effortless control feel normal, but local playback on a Windows PC still often depends on keyboards, remotes, or awkward workarounds that interrupt the experience.
I was also drawn to the idea of a more private and user-controlled setup — something local-first, where the user stays in charge of their own system and movie collection.
So the story is really about bringing those two sides together: the comfort people now expect, and the privacy and control that local playback can still offer. That gradually turned into a voice-controlled, local-first system built around VLC, PotPlayer, and a simple folder-based playback model.
Do you usually write on similar topics? If not, what do you usually write about?
I usually write about practical technology, but mostly when it grows out of something real I’ve been working on. n n So the topics are often similar: automation, local media playback, voice control, and ways to make technology feel simpler and more natural to use. I’m generally drawn to ideas that remove friction instead of adding more layers. n n I don’t really write for the sake of writing. I usually write when there’s a concrete idea or system behind it that feels worth explaining.
Great! What is your usual writing routine like (if you have one?)
I don’t have a strict writing routine. n n Most of the time, I write when an idea has become clear enough that I feel it’s worth explaining. It usually starts with a rough note or a single sentence, then I try to find the real structure underneath it. n n After that, it’s mostly rewriting. I tend to cut a lot, simplify a lot, and keep pushing the text until it sounds more natural and less like something that’s trying too hard.
Being a writer in tech can be a challenge. It’s not often our main role, but an addition to another one. What is the biggest challenge you have when it comes to writing?
The biggest challenge for me is making technical writing stay clear without becoming too abstract or detached from real use. n n It’s easy to explain a system in a way that is technically correct but feels too theoretical or too far removed from the actual experience behind it. I try not to write that way.
What matters to me is keeping the writing connected to the real friction, the real use case, and the reason the system exists at all.
What is the next thing you hope to achieve in your career?
Right now, the main thing I want is to keep pushing Smart Home Cinema further and turn it into something truly solid.
It started from a personal frustration, but I’d like to take it beyond that and make it into a product that feels polished, reliable, and genuinely useful to other people too. n More generally, I want to keep building practical systems around real problems, not just ideas that sound good in theory.
Wow, that’s admirable. Now, something more casual: What is your guilty pleasure of choice?
Probably watching movies late at night when I should really be sleeping. n There’s something very hard to resist about saying “just one more scene” and then suddenly realizing it’s much later than it should be. A lot of the original frustration behind Smart Home Cinema actually came from that kind of moment.
Do you have a non-tech-related hobby? If yes, what is it?
Yes — I enjoy fishing. n I think I like it for the opposite reason I like building systems: it puts me in a completely different rhythm. It’s quiet, simple, and it gives me time to step away from screens and clear my head.
What can the HackerNoon community expect to read from you next?
If I write something next, it will probably stay in the same general area: practical systems, local-first design, and technology shaped by real use rather than abstraction. n I’m most interested in ideas that come from building something real and understanding it well enough to explain it clearly. n So if there is a next piece, it will likely come from that same place.
What’s your opinion on HackerNoon as a platform for writers?
I think HackerNoon is a good platform for writers who want to explore technical ideas in a more personal and experience-driven way. n n What I like is that it leaves room not just for polished industry commentary, but also for stories that come from actually building something, testing it, struggling with it, and figuring things out along the way. n n That makes it a good place for writing that is technical, but still grounded in real use and real experience.
Thanks for taking time to join our “Meet the writer” series. It was a pleasure. Do you have any closing words?
Thanks for having me. n n I’m glad the story resonated with people. For me, the most meaningful kind of technology is the kind that grows out of real use and solves a real frustration in a simple way. n n If this piece connected with readers, I’m happy about that.
