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Brillix Flow

816 N 9th Ave, Evansville, IN 47712

Build Skills That Actually Matter in Tech

We've been teaching people how to code since 2019. Not the trendy stuff that disappears in six months — the fundamentals that stick around. Our programs start in fall 2025, giving you time to figure out if this is really what you want.

See What We Teach
Students working together on programming projects in collaborative learning environment

How We Got Here

Started small in Evansville. Figured some things out along the way.

2019

First Classes Launch

We kicked things off with twelve students in a rented office space. The curriculum was rough around the edges, but everyone who showed up actually learned something they could use. That felt like winning.

2021

Curriculum Gets Real

After watching what actually helped people land jobs, we rewrote everything. Dropped the theoretical fluff. Added more hands-on projects. Students started building portfolios that hiring managers would actually look at twice.

2023

Expanded to Three Tracks

Turns out not everyone wants to be a full-stack developer. We added specialized tracks for people who knew exactly what corner of tech they wanted to explore. Frontend, backend, or data — pick your direction and go deep.

Fall 2025

Next Chapter Opens

New cohort starts September 2025. We're keeping class sizes small because that's what works. Applications open in May. If you're curious about whether coding is your thing, now's a good time to find out.

What Learning Here Looks Like

Three tracks. Real projects. People who've been doing this long enough to know what matters.

Frontend development workspace showing responsive design process

Frontend Focus

Building interfaces people actually use. HTML, CSS, JavaScript — then React when you're ready. You'll make stuff that works on phones, tablets, whatever.

Backend development showing server architecture and database design

Backend Systems

The stuff users don't see but can't live without. Databases, APIs, server logic. We teach Node.js and Python because they're both useful for different reasons.

Data analysis workspace with code and visualization tools

Data Track

For people who like patterns and numbers. Learn to clean messy data, run analysis that makes sense, and explain what you found to people who don't code.

What Past Students Say

Signe Valtonen program graduate

Signe Valtonen

Frontend Track, 2023

I came in knowing basically nothing about code. The instructors didn't make me feel stupid for asking basic questions. By month four I had three projects I could actually show people. Got my first junior dev role six weeks after finishing.

Edita Kowalczyk program graduate

Edita Kowalczyk

Data Track, 2024

Best part was working with real datasets that were actually messy — not the clean stuff you find in tutorials. Learned more from debugging other people's projects than I did from perfect examples. The job search help after graduation was solid too.