Evan Forbes is a pragmatic software engineer with 7 years of experience specializing in API, web, mobile, and native app testing within fast-paced Scrum environments. He organizes cross-team test processes, writes advanced SQL for validation, and crafts comprehensive test matrices and cases while leveraging platform-specific debugging tools like Android Studio, ADB, and Xcode. Beyond QA, Evan contributes to backend open-source blockchain projects—refactoring tests, improving data handling (EDS-to-shares conversion), and updating core dependencies for Celestia’s node, core, and app repositories. Based in Sunnyvale, he combines strong communication and time-management skills with a developer’s fluency in debugging and integration, making him effective at both preventing and diagnosing issues. Notably, his GitHub work shows he can bridge testing discipline with backend systems development in high-dependency, consensus-layer codebases.
7 years of coding experience
8 years of employment as a software developer
Bachelor of Science Computer Science Mathematics, Bachelor of Science Computer Science Mathematics at The University of Tulsa
Contributions:43 releases, 3322 reviews, 345 commits in 2 years 1 month
Contributions summary:Evan's commits primarily involve updating the codebase to reflect the latest versions of core dependencies, including the Celestia-Core and Cosmos-SDK forks. They refactored the codebase to integrate the payment module, specifically handling the creation and inclusion of PayForBlob (PFB) transactions. Additionally, they contributed to the implementation of the ABCI application, focusing on integrating the new PFB transaction type. The contributions showcase an active role in updating and integrating the core components of the Celestia-App.
Contributions:25 releases, 1192 reviews, 222 commits in 2 years 1 month
Contributions summary:Evan primarily contributed to the core functionality of the Celestia-core repository by integrating external dependencies and implementing new functionalities. The user integrated the updated lazyledger fork of go-ipfs, fixed a typo in types, and implemented the GetLeafData method. Furthermore, the user refactored some methods to work with the dag API and updated the code to work with the latest rsmt2d library.
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