Izzy Gomez is a software engineer with 11 years of experience building production-grade systems across startups and tech giants, currently on the engineering team at Stripe in New York. Their background spans product-focused roles at Google (YouTube Music) and founding senior engineering at an early-stage startup, giving them a strong mix of scale-first engineering and hands-on product development. Izzy has worked across backend, ML deployment, and embedded/hardware projects—from deploying CNN-based models at Amazon Lab126 to designing PCBs at Pololu—bringing a multidisciplinary approach to problem solving. They contribute to open-source blockchain tooling by improving Solidity code quality in Consensys’ UniversalToken repo, highlighting attention to compliance and long-term maintainability. Collected experience across research labs and internships at Facebook, Yelp, and MIT labs underpins a pragmatic, data-informed engineering style that favors clean, auditable code.
11 years of coding experience
8 years of employment as a software developer
Bachelor of Science (S.B.) Computer Science & Engineering, Bachelor of Science (S.B.) Computer Science & Engineering at Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Advanced Honors Diploma Engineering and Design, Advanced Honors Diploma Engineering and Design at Northwest Career & Technical Academy
Summer Academy for Math and Science, Summer Academy for Math and Science at Carnegie Mellon University
Implementation of Universal Token for Assets and Payments
Role in this project:
Back-end Developer
Contributions:7 commits, 1 PR, 1 comment in 4 days
Contributions summary:Izzy primarily focused on code quality and compliance within the Solidity smart contract codebase. Their contributions involved adding SPDX license identifiers to all `.sol` files and addressing `solc` compiler warnings related to `pure` functions and unassigned return variables. The user also addressed warnings related to unused function parameters and constructor visibility, cleaning up the code for improved readability and maintainability.
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.