Gabriel Csapo is a Senior Software Engineer with 11 years of experience building scalable web infrastructure and developer-facing tools, now based in San Jose and currently at Vanta. He led GraphQL and web migration efforts at LinkedIn, designed an RSC-first meta framework for React, and owned flagship web infrastructure used across linkedin.com. Gabriel is a hands-on full-stack contributor to notable open-source projects like html-webpack-plugin and Ghost, where he modernized front-end codebases, improved linting, and fixed CI race conditions—work that shows attention to long-term maintainability. His background includes building checkout and localization tooling at PayPal and contributing to offline-first npm mirrors and Ember tooling, reflecting a blend of performance, developer experience, and UX focus. Colleagues describe him as someone who systematically reduces complexity (once cutting code usage by 80% on a profile team) while shipping pragmatic solutions. He’s motivated by building things that help people and often surfaces small but impactful fixes across front-end and tooling stacks.
11 years of coding experience
11 years of employment as a software developer
Highschool, Highschool at The Hun School of Princeton
Highschool Computer Science, Highschool Computer Science at Hamilton West
Contributions:4 releases, 26 commits, 40 PRs in 2 years
Contributions summary:Gabriel contributed to the local-npm project by addressing various issues and implementing enhancements. They fixed issues related to request entity size and non-install commands, and added tests to validate functionality. The user updated dependencies, refactored unit tests, and added support for downloads metrics and scoped packages. Furthermore, they updated the UI to use React, refactoring the frontend codebase.
Contributions:6 reviews, 10 commits, 11 PRs in 3 years 6 months
Contributions summary:Gabriel primarily focused on improving the linting capabilities for Ember templates within the `ember-template-lint/ember-template-lint` repository. Their contributions included the implementation and export of a `rule-test-harness` to be used with other frameworks. The user also added new command-line options for linting, allowing for more granular rule application and configuration. Furthermore, they addressed specific parsing issues related to mustache statements and button element types, as well as implemented a new rule for handling data-test selectors, all enhancing the tool's functionality and accuracy.
hbslinterlinthandlebars-templateshandlebars
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