Brian Choromanski is a software engineer based in Philadelphia with 10 years of experience building full-stack applications using Python, Java, and C. Currently at CommScope, he brings practical expertise in both frontend and backend development, demonstrated by meaningful open-source contributions to projects like the Mealie recipe manager where he implemented PWA features and improved localization of ingredient data. His background includes work on intelligent diagnostics with TensorFlow and large-scale network management from an internship at ARRIS, showing comfort with both ML prototypes and operational systems. Brian’s GitHub work also reflects a keen eye for UX detail, such as refining time formatting and bug fixes in the SponsorBlock extension. He combines a solid computer science foundation from the University of Pittsburgh with a track record of shipping user-facing improvements that bridge usability and performance.
10 years of coding experience
Bachelor’s Degree, Computer Science, Bachelor’s Degree, Computer Science at University of Pittsburgh
Mealie is a self hosted recipe manager and meal planner with a RestAPI backend and a reactive frontend application built in Vue for a pleasant user experience for the whole family. Easily add recipes into your database by providing the url and mealie will automatically import the relevant data or add a family recipe with the UI editor
Role in this project:
Full-stack Developer
Contributions:1 review, 13 PRs, 20 comments in 4 months
Contributions summary:Brian primarily contributed to the frontend of the Mealie application. They implemented Progressive Web App (PWA) features, including adding images, shortcuts, and respecting orientation lock. They also worked on seed data by adding support for plural names in the ingredient units and foods. The user made significant changes to the `nuxt.config.js` file to configure PWA functionalities.
Contributions:5 commits, 8 PRs, 5 comments in 1 month
Contributions summary:Brian primarily focused on modifying the time formatting within the SponsorBlock browser extension's popup interface. Their commits demonstrate a focus on converting time units (seconds/hours) to days, hours, and minutes, with localized abbreviations. The user also addressed a bug in the day-to-minute conversion. Their work involved refining the user interface for displaying time durations accurately.
youtubesponsored-segmentschromiumvideofirefox
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Brian Choromanski - Software Engineer at CommScope