mobile • web • server • desktop • embedded
Super smart - great design skills - solid engineer. Good horse sense for coding. Helping other devs achieve their potential along the way.
My Stack Overflow contributions stem from everyday work questions, especially longstanding questions waiting for fresh and elusive answers.
Likes: | f# c# c++ typescript html css android .net-core gulp angular protocol-buffers sql-server entity-framework azure wpf wix |
I run a startup in machine monitoring while doing side contract work to build complementary skills. I've developed solutions for ERP, electric power, trading, and accessibility systems. I code for iOS and Android (native and Xamarin stacks), the web, and Windows.
I officiate baseball, softball, basketball, and football from pee-wee through college levels. I get yelled at once in a while, and smile anyway. :-)
As with software development, judgement and concentration are very important.
I managed a 6-engineer team in developing the software for electric generators and transfer switches for the industrial, residential, and marine standby power markets. I was responsible for the equipment's firmware and configuration and monitoring apps OnCue and SiteTech (see below).
I doubled the team’s development velocity through technical, hands-on leadership, including writing the code for several key modules. I ran Agile process inside the company's waterfall model.
I managed a 5-engineer team in development of Power Xpert Foreseer (ASP.NET/JS) and other power distribution monitoring and building management products. They provided visibility to hundreds of devices, mostly over BACnet and Modbus.
Before stepping into formal management, I worked on CH Studio (see below) and prior to that, embedded firmware for drives, sensors, and other industrial automation products. My focus was the CAN-based DeviceNet stack.
I started out at Eaton developing a diagnostic recorder for arc-fault-detecting circuit breakers. I was responsible for the circuit boards, software, packaging, production, and installation. I deployed a Linux server to collect and publish the field data.
I repaired, built, and sold PCs. This was before the days of imaging software, but after seeing how slow and error-prone installing bundled software was, I developed a system that bulk "imaged" new hard drives from a master drive.
3.7 GPA
The program used satellite-based distance education (before the web was up to the task) to plug me into on-campus classes at universities such as UC-Berkeley and UW-Madison, according to course specialties. My lectures, homework, tests, and quizzes where synchronized with the on-site class.
NTU is now part of Walden University.
MU Honors Program, Engineering co-op program, IEEE, Eta Kappa Nu, Marquette Computer Society, Engineering Student Council, Solar Society
3.4 GPA
Class rank: 2 / 153; GPA: 4.7 / 4 (advanced classes awarded extra grade points).
AP computer science, math, chemistry, English, and history.
Theater, forensics, debate, national honor society, tennis, baseball, basketball, and plenty more.
Material for That Conference 2014 session How to Show Kids That Coding Is Even Better Than the Zip Line. Contains programs for my course on teaching Small Basic to beginning programmers.
A similar open source project is ThatConference-ModernCrusty, which contains sample code for That Conference 2015 session Tie modern mobile apps to crusty backends with Protocol Buffers.
Sermons on the Web is a web front end and Windows client that made it easy for churches to publish MP3 sermons on their own web site.
I created the project and was its primary contributor.
I helped refine libraries, especially the shared pointer library, and answered questions from other developers.
Amid a blog on the joys of parenting through the children's earlier years, this link is to one of the techier posts: how to fix a CD player with the help of your two-year-old son.
How to build an indoor 3-level condo with open top and bottom. Popular with the house rabbit community. :-)
I developed an Android and iOS app to manage work orders, sales leads, route deliveries, and inventory (v1 in Java, v2 in Xamarin/C#). I also developed cloud-hosted web services for billing, mapping, voice/text alerting, and lead-tracking (ASP.NET Core, Azure, AWS, SQL Server, AngularJS, and Google Maps API).
I developed the part of the iNSITE web app that monitors cellular traffic to provide message tracing, rule execution, variable-window statistical capture, and archiving.
Everything was high volume and real time. I relied heavily on in-process caching and Redis to efficiently decode, capture and tabulate transactions, and SQL Server to store and index wider-range statistics.
I coded the entire back end and much of the front end. See the iVision case study for how we benefited the mobile virtual network operator Numerex.
I developed a bridge to exchange electrical-grid frequency regulation data between the grid's SCADA system and the battery controller for a Johnson Controls distributed energy storage system. The bridge also provided status and statistical updates to the building management system.
The bridge ran as a Windows Service on hardware deployed with the battery systems. It used Microsoft Application Insights for remote diagnostics.
QuadJoy is a mouth-operated computer input device for quadriplegics. I developed the Windows app for configuring the QuadJoy via USB.
I designed a USB-HID protocol friendly to the QuadJoy's 8-bit CPU. I kept the app lean to minimize barrier to entry: the .msi file is under 2 MB and installs without admin privilege.
OnCue is a Windows app that gives customers access to configure and monitor their electric generators and transfer switches over the internet and USB. SiteTech, which provides technician-level access, comes from the same code base.
I managed the development team and project. I developed the network architecture and communication protocol, which was friendly to constrained embedded devices and worked over either TCP/IP or USB Bulk Transfer. The embedded devices acted as clients (not servers). This was before IoT took off and the approach become common practice.
I coded the communication system, the UI used by technicians, and the Windows Installer.
I led development of the industrial network stacks for CH Studio, a Windows app for configuration of Eaton's automation products. I coded the DeviceNet stack in C++, using asynchronous parallel network discovery that blew the socks off competitor Rockwell. I mentored a junior dev who developed the Modbus and EtherNet/IP stacks.
I created the Windows Installer for the product, and built an Python a web-enabled build system.
I designed much of the UI, which an MFC expert coded.
I developed an optical mark recognition system that read charts recording services provided and patient data observed during home health care visits. This was contract work for Weiji Systems Services, Inc.
At age 16, I taught myself C from a good book. One way I put it to use was a program that updated WIN.INI
to tell Windows 3.0 to display a new background texture each time it was run.
My start came in 6th grade from a mix of these ingredients: an 80x24 text-only green screen, two not-so-compelling ASCII-graphic games, and a father who knew just enough MBASIC to teach his 6th grade son. I’ve enjoyed writing software ever since. The needs were simple at first: an app that invoiced my parents for babysitting my little sister, a reimagining of a spelling game I’d seen on a TRS-80 at school, and a version of the bonus round of the game show “Press Your Luck”, which we kids called "Whammy".
US Patent 10,509,075: preemptive diagnosis of common failure modes - and a safe workaround of a competitor's gamesmanship patent.
US Patent 8,942,854: user-friendly peripheral setup.
Most of my tech learning comes from books, online docs, and a good project. This book was a fun Christmas break read.
I was one of the publisher's reviewers for the sixth edition of this book.
I have fond memories of receiving the second edition of this book for my sixteenth birthday and finishing it along with a great many coding experiments by my seventeenth. That's how I learned the programming language that largely shaped my career.
Writing my real program in F# was a mind twist, lending insights to my programming in any language.
First Computer: | Kaypro II |
Favorite Editor: | Visual Studio |