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Terry Chay
Group Tech Lead at Yelp
Terry Chay is a seasoned physicist and technologist with over 20 years of experience in Silicon Valley, excelling as an engineer, architect, and director in startups driving explosive growth.
His versatile expertise spans various tech domains, including internet portals, search engines, social networks, internet of things management hubs, contact management systems, and top web properties like WordPress and Wikipedia.
An innovative thinker, Terry Chay pioneered the Lunch 2.0 movement during the Web 2.0 era back in 2006, orchestrating community-driven events at major tech companies like Facebook, LinkedIn, and Yahoo!, later inspiring similar movements worldwide.
Beyond his engineering prowess, Terry is a highly sought-after speaker in the web development sphere, known for delivering impactful keynotes at international conferences, shedding light on software development's profound influence on modern lifestyles and work cultures.
He holds a Master of Science in Physics from the University of Illinois and a Bachelor of Science in Physics from Caltech, underpinning his strong scientific acumen and analytical skills that complement his technological expertise seamlessly.
Among his notable roles, Terry has served as a Technical Lead at Yelp, Keynote speaker at PHP Group, Head Of Engineering at Clara Health, Principal Engineer at Raise.me, Cofounder & CTO at Tinker, Director of Features Engineering at Wikimedia Foundation, and in pivotal positions at renowned organizations like Automattic, TAGGED, Inc., and Plaxo.
With a diverse professional background encompassing leadership, technical architecture, software engineering, and entrepreneurship, Terry Chay embodies a rare blend of scientific rigor, technological innovation, and visionary leadership that continues to inspire the tech community globally.
Highlights
“Move over humans, there's something leaner…” https://t.co/L5WtS3ZmfB
My recollection is that by the mid 1980’s a C64 cost $50 on the used market. However a disk drive for it was over $100. (Disk drive, not hard drive). As an owner of an Apple ][+ O would admit the C64 was the better value, even with the disk drive needed. https://t.co/yV9k0eCD80
