NYC  SF        Events   Jobs   Deals  
    Sign in  
 
 
NYC Tech
Events Weekly Newsletter!
*
 
COMING UP

SF Climate Week 2026
(Apr 20 - Apr 24)

NYC Space Week 2026
(Apr 21 - Apr 25)

NY Fintech Week 2026
(Apr 27 - May 01)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Popular Event 
With Bob McNaughton (Dir. Engg, UBS), Tynan Daly (CEO, High Dimensional Research).
Datadog at NY Times, 620 8th Ave, 45th Fl
Apr 21 (Tue) , 2026 @ 06:30 PM
FREE
 
Register
 
 

 
DETAILS

Join us on Tuesday, April 21 at Datadog Times Square. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. to give attendees plenty of time to grab pizza & socialize, & the talk begin at 7:15 p.m. Following the success of the UnConf we've absorbed all of your feedback & have two awesome speakers!

Tynan Daly - CEO at High Dimensional Research
Verifying Your Rust, Formally.

Tynan Daly studied mathematics at Bates College with a focus in algebraic topology before spending a decade in ML research, where he productionalized one of the first transformer models in 2018 for dynamic pricing. He is the founder of High Dimensional Research, where he builds formal verification tools for coding agents, translating Rust into Lean specifications for correctness proofs. As coding agents write more of our software, Tynan believes the tooling to verify that software needs to keep pace. He brings a mathematician's instinct for rigor to the practical problem of trusting code at scale.

As coding agents produce more of the code we ship, the volume is outpacing what review alone can catch but in systems where failure matters, "trust but don't verify" isn't an option. This talk explores how formal verification can close that gap. Tynan will introduce Lean as a proof assistant & explain why, despite its power, rewriting your Rust codebase in Lean isn't the answer. Instead, he'll walk through how tools like Hermes & Aeneas bridge the two languages, letting you write Rust & verify it against Lean specifications. He'll demo what this looks like in practice & make the case that formal verification is the same bet Rust developers already made with memory safety: accepting upfront rigor to eliminate entire classes of bugs before your code ever runs.

Bob McNaughton - Director of Engineering at UBS
Use a Rust SAT Solver to play pickleball!

Bob's career began last century, writing C++ & assembler for what was then Australia's only telecom company. Somehow, he ended up writing Go for financial companies in New York. He also managed to pick up degrees from Universities on both continents. He is not sure what the next step will be, but it looks like it will involve Rust. His self assessed USA Pickleball Association skill rating is probably somewhere around 2.5.

Many years ago, when I was an undergraduate CS student, my professor informed me that the Boolean Satisfiability problem was NP-Complete. I took this to mean it was not something I should waste any time thinking about or expect to be a useful tool in the future. Then, many years later, I was attending a Meetup involving some live coding, & the presenter casually imported a SAT solver library, fed it some boolean variables & conditions, & out popped a solution! Then, several weeks later at a Rust meetup, a different presenter equally casually imported a CSP library, & used it to solve a challenging scheduling problem.

Lawrence Harvey is Rust NYC's official recruitment partner, with Ross providing support as a co-organizer & financial support.

The space is generously sponsored by our partner Datadog.
 
 
 
 
About    Feedback    Press    Terms    Gary's Red Tie
 
© 2026 GarysGuide