apps/www/_blog/2021-03-25-angels-of-supabase.mdx
Supabase is an open source Firebase alternative. We're on a mission to build an incredible developer experience around the world's best open source tools.
To build an amazing developer experience, we need developers to guide us. So after finishing Y Combinator, we took a deliberate approach to fundraising. We loaded our Seed round with developers, technical founders, and developer advocates: CTOs who have seen scale, community managers, and hackers. We amassed over 20 angel investors - almost all technical.
The Supabase Team is at full capacity preparing for Launch Week and since we're all short on time we decided - why not ask our Angels to write a fundraising post with us?
So here is our unconventional fundraising announcement, written with a few of the Angels of Supabase.
Cofounder & CTO of Instagram. @mikeyk
~30 these days
Supabase is building tools that are foundational to almost any interactive, modern app, and doing so in a way that's really aligned with how I think of building tech stacks. For example, choosing Postgres (and deeply understanding Postgres' features) as the underlying datastore.
Uppercase but I'm coming around to lowercase!
A website that I built so I could skip out on writing a school paper instead — HTML and Image <map>s for interactivity.
On launch day for Instagram, the site was down for a good chunk of time because we hadn't set a favicon.ico and we had Django set up to email us on all errors. Cue storm of email sends every time someone loaded our homepage…and a very unhappy web server.
Python — though I am very intrigued by Rust.
Stay curious and don't feel like everything you build has to be "the next big thing"; so many times I've worked on a fun side project or exploration and ended up learning something I applied to more "serious" work.
Principal Developer Experience Engineer at Netlify. Outside of that, makes memes, classes, talks, and content for developers. @cassidoo
Probably around 20, depending on the week. Sometimes more!
It's a good tech stack and a tool that I think fills a need for a lot of folks.
Uppercase!
I started making websites as a teenager, and programmed my graphing calculator with good ol' BASIC!
Oh I was a kid, and definitely used it only for CD-ROM games in those dial-up days.
100 duck-sized horses, because I'm a weakling and could probably do better with the smaller things as long as they aren't too organized.
Probably JavaScript. It's gotten to that level of power that I could apply it to almost anything.
Get a calendar you'll actually use and stick to your to-do lists!
Helps developers grow the GDP of the Internet as a Developer Advocate at Stripe. @thorwebdev
Really depends on the projects I'm working on. Sometimes I spend a good amount of time making videos.
The team | The Culture | The DX
lowercase - I prefer not to scream at my DB.
My first proper project was probably at uni, building an app to alert wind surfers of great wind conditions. Was built with Python on a Raspberry Pi, jQuery and PhoneGap
When I was 9 years old my dad signed me up for an HTML summer camp. That's how it all started :D
I think there's a market for duck-sized horses. Would capture and sell them. Also duck's have some nasty claws, wouldn't be a good idea to make them bigger!
I'd do anything and everything in TypeScript if I could!
Get involved with and start contributing to open-source. Start creating content about your open-source contributions, and I'm certain that it will pay off!
Staff Developer Advocate at GitHub. @bdougieyo
~10 hours a week.
Supabase is scratching an itch for me as a developer. I see the value of having a manageable database based on SQL, but I don't only have limited time to code during the week and I don't want that to get sucked into the maintenance and management of that data. I also was a big Firebase fan, and love the developer ergonomics if offered to me as an early user.
Always uppercase, but don't ask me what the acronym stands for.
The first function programming was an Android app in Java that was just a picture of a cat. When you pet the cat it purred, it was part of an Android tutorial when I thought I wanted to be an Android dev. I later got an iPhone and decided to never write Java again when I found Ruby on Rails. I built a Yelp clone for churches, but bailed on that when I took a full time dev role.
My first time using a computer was in second grade and it was to play wolfenstein. We had a computer that we could use in the office of the apartment complex I grew up in. One of the older kids installed the game and showed the other kids how to run in from powershell. Probably not the best game to introduce to a 7 year old, but here we are.
I would tell them to start with creating short form content every day. It easier to make content on things you just learned, so do that. It is also easier to get hired when you already have content.
Growth at Retool. Writes a newsletter that helps people understand software engineering and tech. @itunpredictable
It depends – some weeks I’m mostly writing and coordinating, other weeks I’m writing a lot of code. Lets say 20 hours on a good week :)
I had been working on the Firebase integration at Retool for a bit, and kept wondering why it was (a) closed source and (b) NoSQL only. Over the span of a week, something like 5 or 6 of my developer friends asked me what I thought about Supabase, so I checked it out – after using the product for a side project, investing was an easy decision.
Lowercase, obviously. I wrote thousands of queries when I worked at DigitalOcean, and we didn’t have time to capitalize things.
SQL (particularly standard Postgres syntax) is the best language on the planet. Fight me.
Eh, I can’t really give advice, I haven’t figured anything out myself yet!
Senior Software Engineer at PlanetScale. @kwuchu
Pretty much, the majority of my week is spent coding. I'd say realistically, around 30-ish hours a week or so.
The tagline about Supabase being an "open-source Firebase alternative" had me intrigued. As I looked more deeply into the product, I was impressed by the well-thought out design and also how easy it is to use the product as well.
Uppercase.
During summers as a child, my dad would take me to work with him at the community college he taught at. I'd be sitting in his office while he was in lectures and actually just use his computer to play that 3D Space Pinball game. I think I was 5 or 6 years old at the time.
Honestly, I would probably choose Go. It's a pretty dope language for building out systems.
Always be learning. There's so many things to learn as an engineer and the job is constantly about learning new things. Never settle, never get comfortable, learn as much as you can consistently.
Engineer at OnDeck, Network Leader at Village Global, Founder of Kopa (W19). @zlwaterfield
Anywhere from 10 to 50 depending on the week
I have many ideas, and spinning up a backend, db, etc., is so daunting, so I started using Firebase, but it was very frustrating. When I saw Supabase I instantly knew that was the solution. The ability to use Postgres directly from the client with authentication built-in was a game-changer. I think it could become the go-to that early-stage companies build on to simplify their MVPs.
UPPERCASE
Weirdly enough, I didn't own a computer until I was in grade 12 and didn't learn to code until I was in University. I was the only one in a class of 400+ freshman engineers that had never coded before.
Network, network, network. Everything I do and all my successes are based on my network. Whether that be from YC, my university peers, OnDeck, Twitter, etc. Focus on building your network, and good opportunities will start to pop up.
Head of Developer Experience at Temporal. @swyx
10
I was extremely impressed by the founders and love the idea of offering a beautiful, integrated developer experience atop of proven, scalable, open source foundations.
Uppercase if formal, lowercase if lazy!
We had a computer class in middle school and we were assigned to write a pancake stacking program in BASIC. I was really obsessed by it and was the only person to submit this assignment complete with a graphical user interface (in BASIC!). Sadly I didn't see myself as a programmer until 20 years later.
We raised a $6M seed round led by Coatue, Mozilla, and YC.
Next week is Launch Week and we'll be launching one new thing every day for a week.