I Wish People Were More Public
The author expresses a desire for people to share more of themselves publicly, discussing the value of openness and personal sharing in public spaces.
The author expresses a desire for people to share more of themselves publicly, discussing the value of openness and personal sharing in public spaces.
An international student on an F-1 visa majoring in IT with a late shift toward software development is struggling to land internships in the US due to visa filters, citizenship requirements, and a saturated job market. They graduated in Dec 2026, are pivoting to cloud-focused roles, pursuing an AWS certification, and plan to target startups and continue networking for better opportunities.
The article reflects on a scene that the author has been thinking about increasingly often, offering a commentary on exclusion and cultural divides in contemporary society.
The author, who contributes to open-source full-time, argues that open-source contributions do not help in job searches. Despite having 2-3 years of active open-source work, employers consistently prioritize professional experience and reject candidates based on that criteria.
The author started a blog a year ago with modest expectations, primarily to organize thoughts on management and engineering. Despite anticipating only a few colleagues might read it, the blog attracted over 230,000 unique visitors.
A freelancer is offering full-stack, ML, and DevOps services for a two-week project window, with experience in TypeScript/React, Python FastAPI/Django, C++, and JS across computational science and enterprise software.