Atsushi Eno is a versatile software engineer based in Tokyo with 23 years of experience building cross-platform audio and mobile systems. He combines deep backend and build-engineering expertise with a passion for music software—contributing to synths and MIDI tooling (FluidSynth, RtMidi) and audio plugin work across Android and Linux. His open-source contributions span Mono/.NET for Android, MonoDevelop, and low-level C APIs, showing a knack for fixing platform-specific build and interoperability issues. Skilled in Kotlin Multiplatform, JNI/Java interop, and Android test automation, he bridges native audio code with managed runtimes. Notably, he has improved cross-compilation, Android test infrastructure, and introduced C APIs to make C++ MIDI libraries easier to consume from C and web APIs. He’s a pragmatic problem-solver who quietly strengthens toolchains and sample projects to make advanced audio tech more accessible.
Mono open source ECMA CLI, C# and .NET implementation.
Role in this project:
Back-end Developer
Contributions:1 review, 6130 commits, 37 PRs in 16 years 5 months
Contributions summary:Atsushi's commits indicate a focus on updating and integrating Reactive Extensions (Rx) within the Mono implementation. This includes upgrading Rx to a specific release version, modifying build scripts to include relevant Rx dependencies and test files, and merging code changes. The changes primarily involved updating code and dependency configurations.
.NET for Android provides open-source bindings of the Android SDK for use with .NET managed languages such as C#
Role in this project:
Mobile Developer (Android)
Contributions:165 commits, 221 PRs, 57 pushes in 4 years 8 months
Contributions summary:Atsushi's primary contributions focused on the .NET for Android framework. They implemented fixes for build processes, including fixing toolchain download issues and ensuring build log output in SDK resolution tasks. They also addressed various build issues related to Java interop, Android manifest attributes, and dependency management. Furthermore, the user demonstrated skills in Android SDK component bundling and support for newer API levels.
dotnetandroidsdkcsharpxamarin
Find and Hire Top DevelopersWe’ve analyzed the programming source code of over 60 million software developers on GitHub and scored them by 50,000 skills. Sign-up on Prog,AI to search for software developers.