Software Development

Geekli.st: social network for developers has Philly presence

Geekli.st, the social network for developers, is based in San Diego, but its Director of Operations is firmly planted in Philadelphia.

#hack4good 2013 in Philadelphia. Photo from Chris Barrett's Twitter.

Geekli.st, the social network for developers, is based in San Diego, but its Director of Operations is firmly planted in Philadelphia.

“Our founder [Reuben Katz] asked me to move to San Diego,” said Jedi Weller, a 2012 Drexel graduate. But Weller bought a house in University City and loves Philly.

Jedi Weller is Geekli.st’s Director of Operations.

“I’m never leaving,” he told us at a recent Open Access Philly meeting at Benjamin’s Desk.

Weller, a former software engineer at Malvern-based Unisys, started at Geekli.st in November and works out of Kensington’s Impact Hub when he’s in town. He’s helping to coordinate #hack4good, the company’s socially-minded international hackathon series. Register for the #hack4good Philadelphia at Impact Hub on Feb. 7 – Feb. 9 here.

Geekli.st founder Reuben Katz also has strong Philly ties: he grew up in Wyncote and Elkins Park, graduated from Cheltenham High School and founded an online Spanish bookstore in Philly that he sold in 2002. Katz “has a passion for La Colombe coffee, Philly Pretzels, Pat’s (not Geno’s) and Rita’s Water Ice,” he said in an email.

Companies: Impact Hub Philly

Before you go...

Please consider supporting Technical.ly to keep our independent journalism strong. Unlike most business-focused media outlets, we don’t have a paywall. Instead, we count on your personal and organizational support.

Our services Preferred partners The journalism fund
Engagement

Join our growing Slack community

Join 5,000 tech professionals and entrepreneurs in our community Slack today!

Trending

Entrepreneurship is changing, and so is the economic development behind it

Ghost Robotics settles ‘robot dog’ patent lawsuit with Boston Dynamics

The Clay Studio is working to make tech tools more accessible to community artists

This Week in Jobs: 20 smart picks for your next tech career opportunity

Technically Media