I’m a civic technologist and design researcher, investigating how design and innovative technologies could best be used to improve public services and opportunities for civic engagement. I earned M.S. in Human-Computer Interaction at Georgia Tech, while I researched civic media, food security, and urban computing primarily with the Public Design Workshop. Then I led design and research on several emerging tech (blockchain, quantum, cloud) solutions at IBM while collaborating with civic hackers and activists in the US. Then I decided to do that civic tech thing full time at Truss with some amazing people in an amazing work environment. After a bunch of successful projects there, I went deep into my most successful one, Direct File, by joining the IRS directly in their new Direct File office. Now my focus is on transforming the critical federal department’s accessibility and design while simultaneously building paradigm-shifting software.
- Check my LinkedIn profile for my professional availability and details
- Download my resume if you’d like to keep me on file
- Contact me if you’d like to meet up or chat sometime
- Browse my latest coding projects on Github
- Noun Project: for uploading icons I create
- Follow me on Twitter to see what I’m up to.
- Goodreads: for organizing and finding new reading material
- Venmo and Coinbase: for transactions
This website
Like this site’s look and feel? It’s my own WordPress theme, available on my Github profile. The fonts are Charter and Proxima Nova, using my non-profit license.
Copyright and licensing
All work hosted on andyhub.com that is not my own creation is attributed to its creator on the page linking to that work. For example, the image used for the Open Ghana project was created by Mikaela and Nick, as described at the bottom of that page. Please contact the original owner of works if you’d like to use them.
All work here on andyhub.com not attributed to someone else or not in the public domain is my own work. The copyright for such is sometimes described on the work itself or in a file usually named “LICENSE” in its file directory. Otherwise, code and programs are released under GPLv2, and everything else is released under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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