Hi, we’re JP and Sam, we work as software engineers at the Centre for Effective Altruism (CEA). We’re answering questions about our work on some of the projects many EAs use every day (including this Forum, Giving What We Can, EA Funds, and a bunch of other behind the scenes stuff).
Also, CEA and GWWC are both hiring software engineers, so it’s a good opportunity to ask questions about what it’s like to work here before you apply!
We’ll be answering questions on Tuesday, March 16th.
CEA and GWWC are both hiring software engineers. We build and maintain the tech that any new engineers will be working with (including this Forum), and we know what it’s like to work here. AMA!
JP previously worked at an aerospace startup detecting methane emissions with spectrometers on airplanes. He’s interested in table tennis, plants and economics.
Sam started at GWWC back in 2015, then built EA Funds from the ground up over the course of a few months while CEA was in Y Combinator. He has a past life in party politics.
Ask us about:
- Working on a small team
- Non-profit vs startups
- Our tech stacks
- Anything!
NB: EA Funds is now largely an independent org, so Sam will generally be talking about what it was like working at CEA until very recently. However we still work closely together because we make a good team and are working on very related projects.
Bonus: Although Ben West is no longer primarily an engineer, he built a popular healthcare analytics platform and founded a successful startup. He’ll be managing the new CEA engineer. You can also ask him anything.
Edit: The screenshots below no longer reflect the exact look of the site, since I went ahead and did some of the reshuffling of the "Key Ideas" series that I mentioned. But the only change to the content of that series was the removal of "Crucial Considerations and Wise Philanthropy, which I'd been meaning to get to for a while. Thanks for the prompt!
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Though I'm a bit confused by this comment (see below), I'm really glad you've been keeping up the conversation! At any given time, there are many things I could be working on, and it's quite plausible that I've invested too little time in EA.org relative to other things with less readership. I'm glad to be poked and prodded into rethinking that approach.
Regarding my confusion:
Which reading list are you referring to? (Edit: see here)
The "Key Ideas" list of introductory articles (see the bottom of this page) has always included the GHD article (at least since I started working at CEA in late 2018):
So has the Resources page:
I think it would be perfectly reasonable to have more than one article on this topic (as we will once the Fellowship content becomes our main set of intro resources). And I do plan to reshuffle the article list a bit this week to move the Global Health and Animal Welfare articles towards the top (I agree they should be more prominent). But I wanted to make sure we didn't have some other part of the site where this article isn't showing up.
As for future variants on our intro content:
You can see the EA Fellowship curriculum here. That set of articles is almost identical to what will show up on the Forum soon (I have several sequences published in "hidden" mode, and will publicize them once my project partner signs off).
To briefly summarize, there are eight separate "sequences" in the Fellowship:
Once we've adapted EA.org to refer to this content as our default introduction, I anticipate we'll remove most of our current intro articles from prominent places on the site (though I'm not certain of which will remain).
I've already shared this list of articles with a lot of people in the categories "focuses on non-longtermist causes" and/or "has written good critiques of EA things", to get feedback on what they think of the topic balance/exact articles chosen. I'd also welcome feedback from anyone seeing this — and of course, once we actually publish the Forum version, I'll be hoping to get lots of suggestions from the hundreds of people who will see it soon afterward.