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Mentorship

In this EPF cohort, participants have an opportunity to be mentored by core developers and researchers. Here you can find a list of available mentors and tips on working with them.

Mentors

Name Team Area of focus
Paweł Bylica Ipsilon EVM
Dankrad Feist EF Consensus Research Cryptography, Data Availability Sampling, Proof of Custody, Sharding
Kasey Prysmatic labs Consensus Layer implementation, database and optimization
Fredrik EF Security Research General Security
Matt Geth EVM, DAS, RPC, PBS
Marius van der Wijden Geth Execution Layer, EVM, Crypto, Merge
Hsiao-Wei Wang EF Consensus Research Consensus Layer
Piper Merriam Portal Network Execution Layer, EVM, Networking, Client Design
Alex Stokes EF Consensus Research Consensus layer, MEV, (consensus layer) light clients
Barnabé Monnot EF Robust Incentives Group Cryptoeconomics, economic modelling, data science
Felix (fjl) Geth Execution layer, p2p networking, client testing
Kev Independent Cryptography, Verkle Trees, Statless
Łukasz Rozmej Nethermind Execution layer, P2P, EVM, JSON RPC
Cayman Nava ChainSafe Lodestar Consensus layer, browser compatability
Paul Harris Teku Consensus layer
Mario Vega EF Testing team Execution Clients Testing, End-to-end tests, State Tests
Potuz Prysmatic labs Consensus Layer, Forkchoice, Cryptography (hashing)
Tomasz K. Stanczak Nethermind Protocol Engineering, MEV, EVM
Mikhail Kalinin TXRX Merge, Engine API, Consensus Layer, Optimistic Sync, In-protocol PBS
Guillaume Ballet Geth Verkle Trees
Michael Sproul Sigma Prime (Lighthouse) Consensus layer, fork choice, block fingerprinting
Paul Hauner Sigma Prime (Lighthouse) Consensus layer, code optimisation, rewards profiling

How to get mentorship

In general, program participants are expected to take personal responsibility for their work. Working as a core developer requires you to be able to do self-directed work, and this program is no different. You should speak up and ask when you have questions, but you should also take responsibility for asking well informed questions.

Mentors from above list are open to help you during the program. They can propose project ideas, answer your questions, and guide you if you get stuck. Keep in mind that each mentor has different capacity since they work on the protocol full time.

Mentors are primarily available in R&D Discord channel and some will occasionally attend EPF standup calls. If you didn't get your invite to the server or cannot reach a mentor, reach out to cohort organizers.

Each mentor is covering a certain area of the protocol and representing thier development team. If you choose a project they proposed or your project is within their area, suggest setting up a project group for easier communication. Otherwise, ask for the advice in Discord channel.

Make sure to do your own research before you ask a question, e.g. making sure something like this hasn't been discussed previously in the channel or answered at stackexchange. If the questions targets a specific mentor, feel free to tag them. Your question should be technical and topical. Avoid general and unnecceray messages.