Anthony Sceresini
Engineering Manager
What I do at Propeller
Engineering Manager of the Core Data, Processing and Survey squads at Propeller.
The Processing squad is responsible for turning petabytes of raw geospatial imagery data that is captured through drones and GPS hardware into highly accurate 3D maps and terrain through photogrammetry for use across our platform.
The Core Data squad is responsible for the storage and distribution of big geospatial data globally and at scale and its computational workloads.
The Survey squad is responsible for building user experiences that allow our users to better manage their survey data.
The Processing squad is responsible for turning petabytes of raw geospatial imagery data that is captured through drones and GPS hardware into highly accurate 3D maps and terrain through photogrammetry for use across our platform.
The Core Data squad is responsible for the storage and distribution of big geospatial data globally and at scale and its computational workloads.
The Survey squad is responsible for building user experiences that allow our users to better manage their survey data.
Why Propeller
I would encourage engineers to become familiar with Domain Driven Design and Hexagonal Architecture as a way to build systems that are more easily extensible.
Who am I?
I started my career with a degree in computer science.
To date, my work experience has included building and maintaining web based systems, primarily in build-it, run-it style teams as well as DevOps.
I would consider myself a full-stack engineer.
More recently I have transitioned to an engineering manager in an effort to improve management and leadership.
To date, my work experience has included building and maintaining web based systems, primarily in build-it, run-it style teams as well as DevOps.
I would consider myself a full-stack engineer.
More recently I have transitioned to an engineering manager in an effort to improve management and leadership.
Advice for prospective candidates
When submitting a tech challenge, I have always found that it is an excellent opportunity to sell myself and demonstrate the following:
- My engineering foundations.
- Extensibility
- Readability and documentation.
- Abstraction.
- Quality and confidence.
- Comprehension of the problem domain.
- My thought process.
I also find that your commit history is a fantastic delivery mechanism for your approach and way of working.