Harry Solovay is a technical lead with 11 years of experience building developer tools, documentation platforms, and cloud-native TypeScript tooling from New York. He has driven features across AWS Amplify—including authentication, docs UX, and CI-focused tooling at Amazon—and later led TypeScript tooling for Substrate-based chains at Parity Technologies. At Mina Foundation he continues to blend hands-on engineering with team leadership, focusing on simplifying developer workflows and nurturing collaborative, kind teams. His open-source contributions show a pragmatic attention to developer experience, from improving Amplify docs search and UI to adding auth token refresh and typed interfaces in amplify-js. That mix of product-minded frontend UX and deep backend/auth expertise makes him effective at turning complex distributed systems into approachable developer experiences.
11 years of coding experience
4 years of employment as a software developer
Bachelor’s Degree User Experience in Technology, Bachelor’s Degree User Experience in Technology at Connecticut College
Contributions:13 reviews, 418 commits, 172 PRs in 1 year 6 months
Contributions summary:Harry's commits focus on updating the documentation site for the AWS Amplify framework. Their work includes refactoring the UI, adding the ability to search for specific filters, and fixing styling issues. The user has also modified the code to incorporate an updated API reference and integrate a new code block switcher component. They demonstrate a focus on improving the user experience by improving navigation and code readability within the documentation.
A declarative JavaScript library for application development using cloud services.
Role in this project:
Full-stack Developer
Contributions:20 reviews, 17 commits, 21 PRs in 2 months
Contributions summary:Harry's primary contributions involve enhancing the `amazon-cognito-identity-js` package, including implementing token refresh events and related functionality in `CognitoUser.js`, as well as adding type definitions and improving the test coverage within the `auth` and `datastore` packages. The user also touched upon related testing and utility functions that are utilized within the Amplify ecosystem. These changes indicate a focus on core authentication and data management features, with some attention towards testing and integration.
pwaamazon-cognitoawsaws-mobilestorage
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