
AWS Community Builder
2021 – present
Selected five consecutive years (2021 to 2026) as an AWS Community Builder in the Serverless category. Focused on technical content around AWS, serverless apps, developer experience, and local cloud development.
Polyglot engineer who likes building things, writing them down, and sticking around for the people on the other side.

Engineer. I write, ship, and speak.
I currently work at LocalStack, and I've been programming for about as long as I can remember being one. I tend to follow whatever language or stack a problem actually wants, rather than getting too attached to any one of them.
Most of my work lives at the seam between code and writing: shipping things, then explaining them so the next person can actually use them. That looks like a lot of different things on any given week.
Some days it's documentation, some days it's a demo, sometimes it's standing on a stage. Often it's just answering the same question on Slack for the tenth time without making the asker feel silly for asking.
The piece I keep coming back for is the people. The engineer who finally gets their setup working at midnight. The reader who finds a blog post and stops being stuck. Everything else is just scaffolding around that.
Currently available for: OSS collaborations, speaking engagements, and AI engineering opportunities. If you're working on something at the intersection of developer tools, cloud, or agents, I'd be curious to learn more about it.
Four corners I keep ending up in.
CLIs, SDKs, GitHub Actions, and the small sharp things that save engineers a long detour through stale docs.
AWS-shaped serverless, local cloud emulation, CI pipelines, and the plumbing that keeps deployments boring.
MCP servers, agent-driven workflows & tooling, and the line between hype and something that actually works.
Meetups, community building, and support for those who are just starting out. The work that compounds quietly.
Companies and communities that have shaped what I do, in roughly the order they came along.



A few programs and people that have taken the time to acknowledge my work.

2021 – present
Selected five consecutive years (2021 to 2026) as an AWS Community Builder in the Serverless category. Focused on technical content around AWS, serverless apps, developer experience, and local cloud development.

2022
Awarded by Google Open Source for contributions to moja global, the open-source organisation behind the FLINT climate-tech toolkit. Work spanned documentation, packaging, software pipelines, and community mentorship.
2020
Selected as an Explorer Fellow for Pod 1.1.3 from over 10,000 applicants worldwide. Won two sprint hackathons: Sprint 0 with Helping Hands, an AI navigation app for blind people, and Sprint 4 with WebEdge, a Python CLI for SEO analysis.
Conferences, meetups, and other rooms I've found myself in.
From colleagues and collaborators I've been lucky to work with.
“Harsh is a kind, thoughtful person: a solid contributor with excellent growth potential. He helped team members develop their Git and Docker skills, and delivered team training on using the GitHub CLI.”

“Harsh has been instrumental in creating exceptional technical samples and educational content for LocalStack. His contributions go beyond impactful internal processes; they have helped LocalStack reach a wider developer audience. He further fosters team growth by actively inspiring his colleagues to participate in various events and programs.”

“Harsh has shown exceptional dedication towards the achievement of his goals. He has worked his best to hit the milestones provided to him in the most optimistic way. The ability to grasp the needs and bring the best out of it is inert to him, and it makes working with him really great.”

Books I'm in, photos I've kept, and a few things that don't make it onto the resume.