About me: I started meddling with Python practically the moment I decided software engineering will be my career path, and have been using it for wildly different things for 9 years. I started working professionally in 2013 as a backend/devops engineer, and my skillset is tuned for that role: RESTful API and relational database design, Linux system administration, git, quality assurance, distributed systems, software testing... I think you get the picture. My forte is Python, but I've also professionally written Java and Golang code, and I'm quite confident as long as the language is imperative and its lineage can be traced back to C, I won't have any issues with the programming language.
I went back to school for my master's degree to scratch my research itch, which was successful in doing so as I've published 2 papers and have a pending patent application. In the due process, I've picked up data analysis and computer security skills. Now I'm about to graduate, I'd like to specialize in either backend/distributed systems, data science, computer security or any combination of those. I require no training to be productive for backend roles.
Why no remote? I am about to graduate with my master's degree, and my next job will be the first one after two years of lab work. I would like to live within an office environment for a while to hasten my transition from academia to industry. In addition to that, nearly throughout my whole career, I've worked remotely. While not having to commute every day definitely has its perks, I consider myself an extrovert and enjoy social interaction, and right now I feel commute is a justifiable cost for that.
Remote: No (explained below).
Willing to relocate: Yes, anywhere within US or EU.
Resume/CV: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1KNzEBRkyzImz-4vPTBQB9zyWbJ...
Email: cngkaygusuz at google's mail
About me: I started meddling with Python practically the moment I decided software engineering will be my career path, and have been using it for wildly different things for 9 years. I started working professionally in 2013 as a backend/devops engineer, and my skillset is tuned for that role: RESTful API and relational database design, Linux system administration, git, quality assurance, distributed systems, software testing... I think you get the picture. My forte is Python, but I've also professionally written Java and Golang code, and I'm quite confident as long as the language is imperative and its lineage can be traced back to C, I won't have any issues with the programming language.
I went back to school for my master's degree to scratch my research itch, which was successful in doing so as I've published 2 papers and have a pending patent application. In the due process, I've picked up data analysis and computer security skills. Now I'm about to graduate, I'd like to specialize in either backend/distributed systems, data science, computer security or any combination of those. I require no training to be productive for backend roles.
Why no remote? I am about to graduate with my master's degree, and my next job will be the first one after two years of lab work. I would like to live within an office environment for a while to hasten my transition from academia to industry. In addition to that, nearly throughout my whole career, I've worked remotely. While not having to commute every day definitely has its perks, I consider myself an extrovert and enjoy social interaction, and right now I feel commute is a justifiable cost for that.