Jean Dalferes Robicheaux
Systems architect. Patent attorney. Former Air Force. I build things that run on their own.

I spent thirty years in military aerospace, law, and governance. Blockhouse-controlled rocket launches at Vandenberg. Pentagon briefings. Patent prosecution. The common thread was systems that had to work when nobody was watching.

I retired from the Pentagon in May 2026 and started building something different.

The focus now is AI infrastructure — not the models themselves, but everything that sits around them. The files. The routines. The feedback loops. The agent that checks in the morning and tells you what it did and what broke.

I work from wherever the work is interesting. Subic Bay, Guatemala, Texas Hill Country, Cabo. The location doesn’t matter when the system is designed right.

I’ve been in rooms where the consequences of a design flaw were measured in people and launch windows. That shapes how I think about infrastructure. It should be boring when it’s working. Interesting things should be happening in the work it enables, not in whether it’s running.

That’s the standard I hold this to.