eugeneiiim | 10 years ago | on: Open-Source Loan-Level Analysis of Fannie and Freddie
eugeneiiim's comments
eugeneiiim | 11 years ago | on: Ask HN: Who is hiring? (December 2014)
The last 10 years saw a massive boom in the US real estate market fueled by troubled loans buyers couldn’t afford. An even larger bust followed, with losses of $2.8 trillion along with the homes of more than 14 million Americans. While the economy has since improved, many processes within the mortgage industry have not. Gains have been made primarily in paperwork and manpower, not technology. Operations remain manual and slow and consumers are not happy.
At Blend, we're fixing these problems by replacing the archaic software currently in use at lending institutions with a modern system. We're applying today's data analysis tools and consumer-grade UI/UX to streamline home lending for both borrowers and banks and make the entire process more transparent.
Our team of 20 includes engineers formerly at Palantir, Google, Stanford, MIT, CMU, and Caltech, and we're backed by Peter Thiel, Formation 8, Andreessen Horowitz, Max Levchin, and Lightspeed Ventures. Our stack includes NodeJS, Spark, AngularJS, Python, and ElasticSearch.
eugeneiiim | 11 years ago | on: Ask HN: Who is hiring? (November 2014)
The last 10 years saw a massive boom in the US real estate market fueled by troubled loans buyers couldn’t afford. An even larger, chaotic bust followed, with losses of $2.8 trillion, along with the homes of more than 14 million Americans. While the economy has since improved, many processes within the mortgage industry have not. Gains have been made primarily in paperwork and manpower, not technology. Operations remain manual and slow and consumers are not happy.
At Blend, we're fixing these problems by replacing the archaic software and manual processes currently used for home lending. We're applying modern data analysis tools and consumer-grade UI/UX to streamline home lending for both borrowers and banks and make the entire process more transparent.
Our team of 20 includes engineers formerly at Palantir, Google, Stanford, CMU, and Caltech. We're backed by Peter Thiel, Formation 8, Andreessen Horowitz, Max Levchin, Lightspeed Ventures, and other prominent investors. Our stack includes NodeJS, Spark, AngularJS, ElasticSearch, and Golang.
eugeneiiim | 12 years ago | on: The Mozilla Developer Network has a New Face
eugeneiiim | 15 years ago | on: Graduated with a Major in Startups
- Facebook's PHP compiler.
- VMWare's ESX network kernel.
- iPhone hardware and firmware.
- Qualcomm's Linux distribution.
- Citadel's trading algorithms and execution platforms.
I constantly draw on my coursework in compilers, programming languages, and OS in my work on the Palantir Finance platform.
CMU's CS program prepares you work on problems that are truly technically challenging -- problems that require deep technical knowledge and that often take a large investment to implement. Small startups rarely have the staff and time horizon to invest in creating systems that require technical skills beyond the ability to use an API. So if you work at a small startup that doesn't have the capacity to invest in custom low-level solutions, don't be surprised if your CS skills are not utilized.
eugeneiiim | 15 years ago | on: Why Caltech Is in a Class by Itself
eugeneiiim | 15 years ago | on: Ask HN: Palantir or Facebook?
eugeneiiim | 15 years ago | on: Ask HN: Palantir or Facebook?
eugeneiiim | 15 years ago | on: Ask HN: Palantir or Facebook?
eugeneiiim | 15 years ago | on: Ask HN: Palantir or Facebook?
Working with founders from acquired companies is not a great way to meet co-founders. First, many will have already "made it" and won't have the same drive that they once had. Second, if they do, they'll prefer to work (and socialize with) with other people who are like them -- other successful founders. Maybe they'll let you be an employee at their new startup.
Palantir is full of people who are itching to start a company, and we'll see dozens of startups by Palantir alums after Palantir exits (it's already happening; see posterous.com). The founders of these companies will have unique experience and connections in government and finance, giving them the option to target enterprise problems instead of entering the over-crowded consumer startup scene.
As far as reputation among Silicon Valley investors, having worked at Palantir will look at least as good as having worked at Facebook or Google over the next few years, especially now that Facebook and Google are already big and successful. Joining Facebook or Google today is relatively lazy; it's not as impressive to join a company that's already hugely successful as it is to join a company and contribute to making it successful. Assuming a choice between Palantir and Facebook, an entrepreneurial person with confidence in his/her ability to make a company successful will join Palantir.
eugeneiiim | 16 years ago | on: Ask HN: Who's hiring?
eugeneiiim | 16 years ago | on: Ask HN: Career path for founder of a failed venture backed startup?
At Blend (https://blendlabs.com/), we're working on a modern mortgage lending platform. For anyone who is interested in this, I'd love to chat!