Senior+ engineer — 2× YC, 2 acquihires. OSS maintainer of tmuxp/libtmux (packaged in major Linux distros, FreeBSD, Homebrew). Interested in AI/product work.
Interested in AI oppurtunities, shoot me an email and let's say hi! Mission-oriented, senior+ software engineer. Veteran of 2 YC startups, 2 acquihires.
I've contributed to over 100 open source projects. Find my packages tmuxp and libtmux in major Linux distros, FreeBSD, and brew.
If you narrow yourself to a specific niche well enough, you'll see the same names in citations. To be fair, the areas I dig into don't feel nearly as competitive as say, physics, which I couldn't make heads or tails of.
The whole reason the internet and wikis took off is we were very liberal in how we linked. If we disallowed inbound citations, wouldn't it be a lot harder to backtrack and grasp contextual underpinnings?
Anecdote: In the field of adult attachment theory <-> love there are a few prominent scholars that cite each other: Shaver, Hazan, Mikulincer. They do papers citing their own work and each other [1]. There's also a book by Mikulincer highlights Shaver's upbringing with his parents, his past as a hippy, etc. They're delivering very nice content, and they cite others outside their ("circle"?)
Are there potentially scholars in the field with valuable contributions that go unnoticed? Possibly. It doesn't make self-citations in their papers any less helpful. Also I worry that regulating citations through some system may affect the quality of content and fix something that's not broken.
Which brings me to another issue, aren't we supposed to be helping each other?
Willing to relocate: No
Technologies: Python, TypeScript, React, AWS, Sentry, Terraform, GraphQL, Flask, Django, py.test, ruff, uv, biome, vite, vitest, asyncio
Résumé/CV: https://tony.cv (PDF: https://tony.cv/cv.pdf)
Email: tony [at] git-pull [dot] com
Hi, I'm Tony — a senior software engineer (2× YC companies, 2 acquihires).
I'm the open-source author of `tmuxp` and `libtmux`, both packaged across major Linux distros, FreeBSD, and Homebrew.
I work well on teams of any size and prefer startups using Python.
Available for roles aligned to U.S. or E.U. time zones.