About Apixies
Why Apixies exists
Developers constantly need small utilities — SSL checks, DNS lookups, email validation, QR codes — but each one usually means a separate service, a separate account, and a different response format.
Apixies consolidates these into a single API: one key, one consistent JSON envelope, and a growing set of focused endpoints. The goal is to remove friction so you can focus on what you're building.
Who it's for
Apixies is for developers working on side projects, MVPs, internal tools, and rapid prototypes — anywhere you need a quick utility endpoint without heavy setup.
What it is not
Apixies is not an enterprise platform. It's not trying to replace AWS-scale infrastructure or compete with full-service cloud providers.
The focus is simplicity: small, well-defined endpoints with consistent JSON responses that behave the same way every time.
Apixies will always offer a free development tier. As usage grows, future production options may support higher limits.
Built by curiosity
Hey, I'm Bugra. I have a Master's in Robotics and I make websites. Life is funny like that.
I like building things that don't necessarily need to exist — 3D printing objects nobody asked for, polishing rocks for months just to see what's inside, building furniture that's almost level, and playing guitar badly on purpose (that's my story and I'm sticking to it).
Underneath all of that is the same impulse: curiosity. I'm drawn to systems — mechanical or digital — and to the quiet satisfaction of making something a little clearer than it was before.
I like understanding constraints. I like clean structure. I like when pieces fit together in a way that feels deliberate.
apixies.io is my playground. No stakeholders. No deadlines. No strategy decks. Just ideas that feel interesting enough to chase. Sometimes that means APIs. Sometimes it means small tools. Sometimes it means taking a simple problem and shaping it until it feels coherent — even if it's still a little rough around the edges.
This is where I build for curiosity instead of polish. If you're here, you probably care about that too.
— Bugra Ergin