Remote: Only
Willing to relocate: No
Technologies: .NET (F#) mainly, but also Typescript and Python
Résumé/CV: https://docs.google.com/document/d/e/2PACX-1vTIQlCysV9y-w-PE...
My story is that even though I've always been talented at programming, to the point of winning the national programming championship of Croatia back in 2002, I didn't start it seriously until 2015. I had a dream of wanting to pursue the Singularity, and I worked hard every day, weekends included, to get closer to it. I wanted to get better at ML, so I worked on ML libraries in F#, which eventually grew into work on my own programming language Spiral. It took years of full time work, but I implemented my own PL, and a GPU based ML library from scratch. You can check out the language on the VS Code marketplace. This experience made me really good at implementing ML papers and algorithms. It also made a master of functional programming, and a strong generalist. Most of what I know isn't on the resume, and I am even familiar with dependently typed programming in languages like Agda, and theorem provers like Coq.
Unfortunately, I've stumbled. What I really wanted to do using these skills is create something like a poker bot, and crush the online gambling dens, but no matter how much effort I put into ML, I could never overcome the state of the art in a significant way. This is a huge problem since I am interested in RL, but RL only works on toy problems. I hate that I know everything that is wrong with current ML techniques, but have no idea how to fix it.
Instead of the world we have in the current timeline, it was obvious to me from the start that the way ML is currently done is broken, but I thought the research community would be able to overcome it, and give me some tools I could use to make a real world effect. Also, I thought there would be a ton of AI chip startups coming out with novel hardware, in which Spiral could have found its niche, but so far they've been a huge dud, and NVidia reigns supreme.
I am really looking for work so I can finance my own ML research, thus far I didn't need it, but I've come to the conclusion, that if I want to make a real breakthrough, I should be implementing genetic programming systems on AI hardware (not GPUs) but that approach would be highly intensive on computational resources which I cannot afford. In my work on Spiral, I've pretty much reinvented the field of partial evaluation, and if the job involved making advanced software like interpreters on hardware that had poor software support, I'd probably be peerless at that, even compared to anybody else in the world.
But as for web dev jobs which I am seeking currently, it feels like I am mid range in terms of skill. In the past few months I've gotten familiar with React, Fable, and now am pivoting to Blazor, and by the end of the year, I should be good at that.
Right now I am making Youtube videos of using F# for webdev that you can check out here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC6e__mOHSUPTu9HQ2W2RGcQ
I am also a prolific (if not a popular) writer: https://www.royalroad.com/fiction/57747/simulacrum-heavens-k...
My English proficiency is titled way too hard towards the writing side, so I've been doing screencasting in part to surmount that weakness.