Hamad Aloqayli
Software Engineer
About Me

Bachelor's degree in Software Engineering, College of Computer & Information Sciences - King Saud University with second class honors.
Frontend Software Engineer with 4+ years of experience building high-quality ReactJS applications across Tech, Startup, and
R&D sectors. Certified Agile Project Manager and IT Service Management Specialist, skilled in aligning technical execution with project goals using Scrum. Blending technical
expertise and strategic project management to deliver impactful software.
For six months, like clockwork, the connection on his Sy-GPON-4020-WDONT router would stutter, wheeze, and flatline just as he was about to secure a win in his ranked match. The ISP’s support line had become a ritual of hold music and scripted lies: “Have you tried turning it off and on again?”
Twenty-two minutes passed. Not twenty—twenty-two. Omar had already Googled “how to unbrick sy-gpon-4020-wdont via serial UART” when the lights suddenly returned.
His cursor hovered.
So when Omar stumbled upon a buried forum post—dated 2014, written in broken Portuguese, and hidden behind three “are you sure?” warnings—his heart nearly stopped. A user named fiber_ghost had posted a link.
Omar clicked . Selected the .bin . Clicked Upgrade . sy-gpon-4020-wdont firmware download
It wasn’t that Omar wanted to be a hacker. He just wanted his internet to stop dying at 2:17 PM every day.
PON: solid green. LAN1: flickering like a trapped firefly. For six months, like clockwork, the connection on
At 2:17 PM, he held his breath.
My Skills
Major Skills
For six months, like clockwork, the connection on his Sy-GPON-4020-WDONT router would stutter, wheeze, and flatline just as he was about to secure a win in his ranked match. The ISP’s support line had become a ritual of hold music and scripted lies: “Have you tried turning it off and on again?”
Twenty-two minutes passed. Not twenty—twenty-two. Omar had already Googled “how to unbrick sy-gpon-4020-wdont via serial UART” when the lights suddenly returned.
His cursor hovered.
So when Omar stumbled upon a buried forum post—dated 2014, written in broken Portuguese, and hidden behind three “are you sure?” warnings—his heart nearly stopped. A user named fiber_ghost had posted a link.
Omar clicked . Selected the .bin . Clicked Upgrade .
It wasn’t that Omar wanted to be a hacker. He just wanted his internet to stop dying at 2:17 PM every day.
PON: solid green. LAN1: flickering like a trapped firefly.
At 2:17 PM, he held his breath.