Expo
Quinlan Jung has a diverse range of work experience. Quinlan started their career as an intern at Xinfinity Solutions in 2012. Quinlan then worked as a Tutorial Instructor at The University of British Columbia from 2011 to 2013, where they received high teaching evaluations. In 2013, they interned at UBC Network, Systems and Security Lab, implementing client-side validation and a hybrid cryptosystem for an application framework.
Quinlan's next role was as a Software Development Engineer at Amazon starting in 2014. Here, they worked on the Elastic Block Storage team, redesigning and implementing part of a distributed system to make it more scalable and fault tolerant.
In 2016, Quinlan had two positions. Quinlan first worked as a Software Engineering Intern at Amplitude Analytics, where they implemented a popular analytics product called Lifecycle. Later that year, they became a Graduate Research Assistant at Stanford University, where they developed a novel authentication system for protecting against rubber-hose attacks. This project was supported by the Stanford Cyberinitiative Grant.
Most recently, Quinlan has been working as a Software Engineer at Expo, Inc since 2017.
Quinlan Jung completed their Bachelor of Science (BS) in Computer Science from The University of British Columbia, from the years 2008 to 2014. Quinlan then pursued a Master's degree in Computer Science from Stanford University, from 2015 to 2017.
Expo
Expo is an open-source platform for making universal native apps for Android, iOS, and the web with JavaScript and React.