Stashpad
Cara Borenstein's work experience includes serving as the CEO and Co-Founder of Stashpad since January 2019, where they are involved in developing a new note-taking approach. Prior to that, they worked as a Software Engineer at Twilio Inc. from August 2016 to December 2018. Cara also served as an Application Development Analyst at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York from July 2015 to July 2016. Additionally, Cara worked as a Workshop Leader at Columbia University in the City of New York from December 2013 to December 2014 and as a Summer Analyst at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York from June 2013 to August 2013. Cara has experience as a Programmer at the Center for Advanced Information Management from October 2012 to May 2013 and as a Technology Intern at Ipreo from June 2012 to August 2012. Furthermore, Cara presented their research on gender biases in Computer Science at the national Grace Hopper Conference for Women in Computing in 2010.
Cara Borenstein attended The Dalton School from 2007 to 2011 for their primary education. Later, they pursued their higher education at Columbia University from 2011 to 2015, where they obtained a Bachelor of Science degree in Computer Science.
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Stashpad
Stashpad is the evolution of the legal notepad. Bytebase is designed for busy professionals who don’t have time for sophisticated notes methodologies and is the fastest way to create and share notes as they work, without leaving the keyboard. In Bytebase, notes are separated into small, self-contained units called bytes. Users can enter data andpaste in code, text, or whatever they want to save. They can share it with others and create separate notebooks for each project. More important, each note can act as a link to another note, allowing to nest information within other pieces of information. To use it, users can simply paste in code snippets and text into the “No Man’s Land” area and then move it into separate projects later. A feed lets users send notes, called bytes, to co-workers within Bytebase. They can also add large text chunks called BigBytes. They can also make outlines and to-do lists in the app.