Bill Laboon is a seasoned software leader and educator with 13+ years building and operating production software and a recent focus on Web3, currently serving as Vice President Technical Operations at Web3 Foundation. He bridges academia and industry—authoring a widely used undergraduate textbook on software testing, teaching blockchain and QA at the University of Pittsburgh, and directing education and grants for Polkadot-related initiatives. A hands-on engineer fluent in Ruby, Java and Solidity (with recent Rust and Haskell experience), he combines full-lifecycle product delivery, QA discipline, and smart-contract expertise to raise code quality across crypto ecosystems. His open-source contributions include front-end work on the authoritative Polkadot Wiki, reflecting a practical bent for developer tooling and documentation. Notably, he also wrote a techno-thriller about a cryptocurrency-only world, underscoring a rare blend of technical depth and storytelling.
13 years of coding experience
17 years of employment as a software developer
MSIT, Software Design and Management, MSIT, Software Design and Management at Carnegie Mellon University
BS, Computer Science, Political Science, Related Area: Mathematics, BS, Computer Science, Political Science, Related Area: Mathematics at University of Pittsburgh
Contributions:166 reviews, 220 commits, 288 PRs in 2 years 8 months
Contributions summary:Bill primarily contributed to the front-end development of the Polkadot Wiki, focusing on the initial setup and layout using Docusaurus. Their work included the implementation of basic Docusaurus components, specifically modifying the `index.js` and `Footer.js` files. The user also updated the `website/siteConfig.js` file, which likely involved configuring the website's appearance and navigation elements. Furthermore, they worked on styling changes through the modification of the `extra.css` file.
Contributions:82 commits, 1 PR, 71 pushes in 3 months
fallsoftware-qualitysemesterqualityassurance
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.