
Where bandwidth is limited and time is tight, young innovators shine with tools that are efficient, straightforward, and reliable. Meet Miguel Kalaw, a Software Development Intern at Springboard Philippines, whose work blends sharp engineering with a clear mission: build for good.
Miguel’s latest contribution speaks for itself. For Rush PH, a platform relied on by commuters for transit updates, he delivered a performance-focused update that makes the app lighter and more resilient on uneven connections. The new Low Data Mode trims bandwidth usage without sacrificing accuracy—so riders get the information they need, when they need it, even on slow networks. As the product note says: “Now lighter, smarter, and easier to use. Get accurate train and bus updates without worrying about high data use.” To learn how Springboard nurtures this kind of pragmatic innovation, explore our engineering approach.
What makes Miguel’s story stand out is how quickly he translates curiosity into capability. At Springboard Philippines, he has leaned into an environment that prizes real-world problem solving. Interns at Springboard aren’t parked on the sidelines; they’re embedded in shipping teams, code-review loops, and post-release retros. If you’re a student or early-career developer looking for that kind of hands-on growth, see opportunities at Springboard.
Outside the office, Miguel is a familiar face on the hackathon circuit—and not just for showing up, but for winning. Recent titles include HackerCup at De La Salle University and the Inventi Hackathon by Inventi Asia, where his team’s prototypes stood out for clarity of purpose and technical polish. Those sprints are more than trophies; they’re training grounds that mirror Springboard’s build-measure-learn loop. Companies that want that mindset in their projects can partner with Springboard Philippines to co-create, prototype, and scale.
Ask Miguel why he builds and he keeps it honest: “It’s for the thrill of the competitions and upskilling. But ultimately, it’s building for good.” and that shows up in the choices he makes, prioritizing performance on low bandwidth, designing for real constraints, and measuring success by user impact.
For Springboard Philippines, Miguel reflects what the organization aims to cultivate: engineers who ship and builders who care. By pairing ambitious talent with live products, structured mentorship, and honest feedback loops, the outcome isn’t just a stronger résumé; it’s a practitioner who can step into high-stakes problems and deliver outcomes that matter. Curious how we upskill interns and teams? Learn more about our programs.
As Rush PH rolls out its Low Data Mode and more commuters feel the difference, Miguel is already looking for the next bottleneck to remove, the next user pain point to reduce. It’s the habit he’s building at Springboard: see the system, find the leverage, ship the improvement.
Ready to build with us? Visit springboard.com.ph to collaborate, hire our team, or apply for internships.


