Paulo Cuchi is a pragmatic software engineer with 11 years of experience building server-side web applications and distributed systems from Brazil's Santa Catarina. He has shipped data-intensive back ends and search/queue integrations using Python, Django, PostgreSQL, Redis, ElasticSearch and Node.js across startups and enterprise partners, and currently contributes to Trusted Health. A self-taught developer who has led forks and mentored teams, he blends hands-on implementation with technical leadership—having led back-end efforts and DevOps research at NG Informática and Magrathea Labs. Paulo is also an active open-source contributor to high-impact projects like the Node.js job queue Bull, where he added precise repeatable-job scheduling down to seconds and milliseconds and fixed cron/every interaction bugs. Colleagues value his focus on reliability and maintainability, and his cross-stack fluency from Java EE and Android to TypeScript/React signals a practical adaptability beyond any single ecosystem.
11 years of coding experience
6 years of employment as a software developer
Technology degree, Systems Analysis and Development, Technology degree, Systems Analysis and Development at Universidade do Estado de Santa Catarina
Web Development Technician, Computer Software Technology/Technician, Web Development Technician, Computer Software Technology/Technician at SENAI/SC - Serviço Nacional de Aprendizagem Industrial
Premium Queue package for handling distributed jobs and messages in NodeJS.
Role in this project:
Back-end Developer
Contributions:5 commits, 2 PRs, 1 comment in 21 days
Contributions summary:Paulo contributed to the `bull` project, a job and message queue package for NodeJS, by implementing and testing features related to repeatable jobs. Their work included adding support for seconds and milliseconds intervals in repeatable jobs, enabling more flexible scheduling. The user also wrote tests to cover the implemented functionality and addressed a bug related to the simultaneous use of cron and every options. Furthermore, they refactored the codebase to use ".every" property instead of a different approach.
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