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<p>Graham is Professor of Computer Science at the University of Nottingham, where he leads the Functional Programming Lab. He’s been involved in Haskell research and education for many years, and has served as an editor of the Journal of Functional Programming, vice-chair of the ACM Special Interest Group on Programming Languages, steering committee chair of the International Conference on Functional Programming, and program chair of the Haskell Symposium. The second edition of his book “Programming in Haskell” was published by Cambridge University Press in 2016.</p>
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<p>Hazel spends her days working on building out teams of humans as well as infrastructure, systems, automation, and tooling to make life better for others. She’s worked at a variety of companies, across a wide range of tech, and knows that the hardest problems to solve are the social ones. One of her favorite things is watching someone light up when they understand something for the first time, and a life goal of hers is to help as many people as possible experience that joy.</p>
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<p>Hazel has spoken at conferences about her work in open source, and is the creator of the “setup” GitHub Action for Haskell. She brings a passion for developer experience, empathy, and continuous collaborative improvement to everything she does. She also loves swing dancing, both as a leader and a follower.</p>
<p>Hazel spends her days working on building out teams of humans as well as infrastructure, systems, automation, and tooling to make life better for others. She’s worked at a variety of companies, across a wide range of tech, and knows that the hardest problems to solve are the social ones. One of her favorite things is watching someone light up when they understand something for the first time, and a life goal of hers is to help as many people as possible experience that joy.</p>
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<p>Hazel has spoken at conferences about her work in open source, and is the creator of the “setup” GitHub Action for Haskell. She brings a passion for developer experience, empathy, and continuous collaborative improvement to everything she does. She also loves swing dancing, both as a leader and a follower.</p>
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<p>Jasper encountered Haskell just as he started university, and was completely smitten by the language. He went on to spent most of his student days working on various open source Haskell projects. After graduating, he worked for several companies using Haskell in production. He then started to contribute to the community, chairing the Haskell.org foundation and growing ZuriHac into a world-class event. He currently works in the cloud & software security field.</p>
<p>Josh is a member of the GHC team working at IOG, focusing on the JavaScript backend and has a background of working with parallel numerics code on the Accelerate project.</p>
<p>Jasper encountered Haskell just as he started university, and was completely smitten by the language. He went on to spent most of his student days working on various open source Haskell projects. After graduating, he worked for several companies using Haskell in production. He then started to contribute to the community, chairing the Haskell.org foundation and growing ZuriHac into a world-class event. He currently works in the cloud & software security field.</p>
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<p>Laurent joined the Haskell community in 2017. He participates a lot in open-source software developement, and maintains several projects such as Cloud Haskell, Beam, and Hakyll. One of his goals for the Haskell Foundation is to expand the reach of Haskell in industry, by facilitating the learning experience for people curious about Haskell.</p>
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<p>Laurent has a PhD in Physics, with a focus on quantum condensed matter. His personal interests include the application of Haskell for high-performance scientific computing, distributed systems, and data science. Today, Laurent works at Bitnomial, a fintech startup running a commodity derivatives exchange and clearinghouse, and whose entire backend is built in Haskell.</p>
<p>Josh is a member of the GHC team working at IOG, focusing on the JavaScript backend and has a background of working with parallel numerics code on the Accelerate project.</p>
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<p>Founder and CEO of digitally induced. Marc is interested in driving the adoption of functional programming in the broader software industry. He is author of the IHP web framework and organizes the Silicon Valley Haskell Meetup.</p>
<p>Moritz has a background in mathematics but ended up in mobile application development. His interest in reliability, simplicity, and low-power single-board computers/mobile devices drew him to contribute to GHC’s Codegen backend. His contributions to GHC expanded over time to include the NCG and LLVM backends, the in-memory linker, and continuous integration infrastructure. A keen interest in solid systems engineering, and cross-compilation further motivated his GHC and tools contributions, culminating in haskell.nix, a nix-based cross-compilation solution.</p>
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<p>Currently, Moritz is the Head of Platform Engineering at IOG. In this role, he leads the compiler, developer experience, and infrastructure teams. His work centers on enhancing the Haskell development experience, with a primary emphasis on stability and reliability.</p>
<p>Graham is Professor of Computer Science at the University of Nottingham, where he leads the Functional Programming Lab. He’s been involved in Haskell research and education for many years, and has served as an editor of the Journal of Functional Programming, vice-chair of the ACM Special Interest Group on Programming Languages, steering committee chair of the International Conference on Functional Programming, and program chair of the Haskell Symposium. The second edition of his book “Programming in Haskell” was published by Cambridge University Press in 2016.</p>
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