Likes: | c# html5 javascript linux rest asp.net-mvc asp.net-web-api angularjs |
I arrived at The Nerdery with limited professional ASP.NET experience, though I had learned the basics through side projects and tutorials. I quickly ramped up on Sitecore and Umbraco and began a long engagement helping a client update and maintain their enterprise Sitecore brand site.
Implementation of custom software for variety of clients across multiple spheres.
Maintenance and upgrades to .NET application for controlling and displaying data from PCI based telemetry hardware. Initialized company's linux support.
2 Years of B.S.E.E coursework including systems programming, C, C++, digital logic design. Though I switched from EE to Religion for personal reasons, I never truly lost my fascination with computers and technology.
Play hockey with electric fields - can you navigate the puck around obstacles and into the goal?
Sole developer. This github entry is for the client-side javascript, though I also wrote the Rails backend. The site gets a bit of modest traffic and appears to be used by some teachers as a teaching aid for students studying electric fields.
Use web.config external file directives to keep application secrets out of version control
How to export namespaced objects into the global scope when using browserify
Hard won tips and techniques for Sitecore 7 ContentSearch API and configuration
Non-deterministic physics makes for a terrible game experience.
Operation Show! is a nonprofit facilitating comedy improv events for Kansas City high school groups
Helped design and implement Umbraco CMS as a platform for providing Operation Show with a new website during The Nerdery's 24 hour Overnight Web Challenge. My team consisted of PM, 4 server side and 3 client side developers. I helped design the information hierarchy for the site, implemented custom back office reporting and functionality, and provided technical guidance on using Umbraco's APIs.
http://www.mattburkedev.com/overnight-web-challenge-2015-dangerzone-and-operation-show/
Javascript game to push electric charges around obstacles.
Developer
I’m a web developer currently living in Kansas City, MO.
I’ve been a full-time developer for just over a couple of years. I started at a .NET consulting firm where I worked directly with clients on primarily ERP and accounting integration software.
Eventually I inherited an internal PHP job-management application that our client wished to productize and take to market. This was my first foray into web development using LAMP. I learned a ton from this project by refactoring and modularizing the spaghetti that PHP code is notorious for.
Even though PHP has its flaws, its a great platform for learning how the web works: you can’t escape the mechanics of request and response. It forces you to learn how sessions, cookies, and databases play together. Many frameworks can abstract a lot of this away from you, but there’s no substitute for learning the foundations through sweat and tears.
A friend kept pestering me to apply at Red Ventures and I started in January of 2013. RV was a tremendous growth opportunity for me. I developed my OO PHP skills, learned to craft complex Apache configurations, SEO techniques and became proficient in javascript using jQuery, node, and angularjs.
RV is where I grew into a fan of TDD. While we had an existing PHPUnit based testing infrastructure, no one on my team was really using it. I gave it a try and loved the benefits it brought me: better, more modular designs; regression insurance; and documentation. I grew the test suite from 0 to over 500 tests.
We recently moved to Kansas City, MO where I started at The Nerdery as a Software Engineer specializing in .NET. I’ve been working on adding features to a client’s internal tools as well as improving the performance and reliability of their brand site.
On the side, I’ve been teaching myself Ruby and Ruby on Rails over the last few months and I’m anxious to expand my skills in that direction. I started with Michael Hartl’s Ruby On RailsTutorial and expanded what I learned there to a number of side projects including an online HTML canvas game featuring user signups, scoreboards, and replays.
I’m also finding ASP.NET MVC to be an extremely compelling platform. Recently I built another small game and hosted it on Windows Azure. Microsoft’s development environment and tooling are top-notch. After a year and a half of using dynamic languages, it was interesting to see how I liked working with a compiler again. Microsoft is making a lot of great changes in the web-development space, and I’m excited to see where it goes.
Favorite Editor: | Vim |