This CV is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. This is the same license that is used for the simple-hipstercv LaTeX template made by Sarah Yang, known as latex-ninja on GitHub. She also has a blog for those interested in following her activities. I used her template with a couple of modifications.
I changed the layout with the following modifications.
- Removed Languages, Certificates & Grants, Publications, and Talks sections
- Removed address footer
- Converted Short Resume section to an Open Source section
- Converted Curriculum section to a Work Experience section
- Inserted a News section
- Changed picture to a rectangular bounding instead of circular bounding
I changed the color scheme accent color from its original cyan to a green color reminiscent of the color used by my current employer. Applied actual content over the initial CV template. I originally started this CV in Overleaf, which is why the repository is not a direct fork of the original CV template repository.
There are two main reasons why I wanted to open source my CV.
- It serves as a way to practice LaTeX. I tend to do more clean up when there is public visibility.
- Makes for a good summary of what I have been doing for fellow contributors I have worked with over the years.
I did not open source my CV to solicit job offers and am not looking for any opportunities. It mainly serves as a summary of who I am, a reminder of what I have done so far, and a guide post for what I need to do next.
Released copies generated from my CV’s source code can be found in the project’s releases page. I use Xu Cheng’s latex-action GitHub Action to simplify the automation.