Amy Sorto is a software engineer with 11 years of experience, currently contributing to Google's Angular Core Team in New York where she focuses on Material Design component development. She has a strong front-end specialization evidenced by meaningful contributions to the high-profile angular/components repo—improving stepper accessibility, internationalization, and UX details like disabled styling and screen reader text. Her background includes multiple internships at Google and NASA JPL and a role at Uber, reflecting comfort across large-scale product codebases and early-career mentorship. A computer science graduate from Scripps College, she pairs academic fundamentals with practical production experience shipping accessible, user-focused UI components. Notably, she brings an eye for inclusive design—not just features but how they behave for assistive tech—making her work valuable to broad user bases.
11 years of coding experience
1 year of employment as a software developer
Bachelor's degree Computer Science, Bachelor's degree Computer Science at Scripps College
Component infrastructure and Material Design components for Angular
Role in this project:
Front-end Developer
Contributions:65 releases, 212 reviews, 184 commits in 1 year 7 months
Contributions summary:Amy primarily contributed to the `angular/components` repository, focusing on the development of Material Design components for Angular applications. Their work included adding and modifying examples, specifically related to the stepper component. They added examples with the `MatStepperIntl` service, and also removed ripple and hover styling for disabled step. Further, they added screen reader accessibility text and functionality to the stepper.
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