The Team
Passionate about open communication platforms and distributed protocols, Jeremie loves building systems that put people at the center of the web and data at the edge of the network. He founded Jabber/XMPP, and has most recently been immersed in JSON and TeleHash. He’s a proud big city commuter from Iowa.
Jason grew up as the son of a baseball coach, fascinated with statistics, data story-telling (scoresheets), and great teams. He ensures (in no particular order) that: there's ample beer in the Singly fridge; ink or coffee on his hands/shirt; and a lively mix of awesome people around Singly who share the same passions/visions.
A Brooklyn hacker + hipster import to the San Francisco Mission. He’s passionate about making it easier to build applications on personal data. Simon plays the mandolin, makes pretty average origami, and is still experiencing the after-effects of jet-propulsion engineering.
As the first contributor to the Jabber project, Temas is a longtime open source advocate. When he's not coding he spends his time as the chief cat herder for the Locker Project's open source community. If you see him away from his keyboard, either the (entire) internet is down, or he’s trying to figure out who all the kids running around his house are.
Lindsay comes to Singly through a fascination with human attitudes and behavior and the world of consumer insights and marketing, acting upon information that reveals the ways humans interact with their world. She relishes the opportunity to help communicate the complex, persuade the unpersuadable, and give forthright feedback.
A veteran of the free software community, Matt believes in the transformative potential of technology. As founding CTO of Ubuntu, he spent the last decade making Linux accessible, useful and enjoyable for millions of people. He was drawn back to San Francisco by the chance to create distributed networks (and by his love of burritos).
Chris found his way to our team after working on several products that track personal habits through data. Chris excels at getting ahead of problems, drinking coffee and cranking out code. He's known to occasionally rock a karaoke bar and toss back a PBR. And, in his spare time, he moonlights as a graphical tide prediction tool for Windows CE.
Eric first heard about Singly and the Locker Project in a dive bar in Manhattan while attending the TechStars NYC program, during a discussion about "the coolest project you could think of working on". Later that night he forked the Github repo, and the rest is history. When not hacking on code, he often finds himself in front of an Arduino board, analog synthesizers, or the book Human Action.
Forrest comes to Singly by way of a years in the Medium Data trenches, and a long history of trying to make mutually hostile code bases play nice. His interests include scaling data both up and across, making do with what you've got rather than with what you think you ought to have, and the interplay between System F:> and duck typing.