Michael Keller is a New York–based reporter with 12 years of experience digging into technology, data, AI and privacy for The New York Times and beyond. He combines rigorous investigative journalism with hands-on technical chops—contributing to open-source projects like a Svelte graphics framework and enhancements to the widely used degit scaffolding tool. As co-founder of an informal data journalism collective, he blends community-driven experimentation with newsroom storytelling to surface subtle tech-society impacts. His work sits at the intersection of code and coverage, bringing developer-level understanding to reporting on complex systems and policy.
Contributions:19 releases, 36 reviews, 537 commits in 4 years 4 months
Contributions summary:Michael appears to have made several contributions focused on the development of the LayerCake graphics framework for SvelteJS. The commits show the implementation of various utility functions, component layout structures, and styling updates. The changes involved coding within the `LayerCake` structure, potentially indicating a focus on component-level design and feature enhancements within a front-end context.
Contributions:12 commits, 4 PRs, 12 comments in 1 year 6 months
Contributions summary:Michael primarily contributed to the core functionality of the `degit` project, a straightforward project scaffolding tool. They focused on enhancing the tool's capabilities by implementing features for cloning and removing files/folders using directives, and by refactoring the structure for improved efficiency. Their work involved modifications to the build process, including stashing, un-stashing, and optimized file handling, including support for both files and directories.
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