Digital Services Expert at United States Digital Service
I help awesome people make awesome things for everyone.
I help awesome people make awesome things for everyone.
Use case creation, testing, and analysis; usability studies and analysis; content architecture.
End-user, administration, and API documentation; liaison between Accenture engineering and design consultants and internal management.
End-user, administration, API documentation, release notes, and product briefs for Solaris 7 in all Asian languages; coordination of efforts with European locales; management of external translation vendors and internal test groups.
End-user, administration, and API documentation; release notes and product briefs; documentation internationalization and localization; documentation project management.
Development, implementation, and ongoing administration of corporate websites.
[Ed. note: I wrote this for a Hobsons internal thing for the “People Leader” group, when asked to write on the topic of motivation and employee engagement.]
This is a completely unsolicited post; the good folks at The Pragmatic Studio have no idea that a random person on the Internet (me) plans to say nice things about them.
I'm not going to lie, this post is primarily for my friends on the Careers 2.0 team at StackExchange.
A recent blog post from the folks at Code Climate (a highly recommended hosted static analysis tool for Rubyists) highlighted a study that found what the researchers deemed "The Unexpected Outcomes...
At my last job, one of the things I did was re-form a development team; I anchored it by hiring two exceptional people I worked with before, but that left two other open positions that I advertised...
With all due respect to my partner, I am totally in love with StackExchange, the network of Q&A sites that began with StackOverflow.
As someone who has made a decent secondary income for the last twelve years writing technical books, a recent post in the SD Times caught my eye: “Are tech books dead?”…
When I read the Chronicle piece, “I’ll Never Do it Again“—about one professor’s negative experiences teaching online—I thought to myself, “Great! Don’t."
I help awesome people make awesome things for everyone.
I help awesome people make awesome things for everyone.
Use case creation, testing, and analysis; usability studies and analysis; content architecture.
End-user, administration, and API documentation; liaison between Accenture engineering and design consultants and internal management.
End-user, administration, API documentation, release notes, and product briefs for Solaris 7 in all Asian languages; coordination of efforts with European locales; management of external translation vendors and internal test groups.
End-user, administration, and API documentation; release notes and product briefs; documentation internationalization and localization; documentation project management.
Development, implementation, and ongoing administration of corporate websites.
[Ed. note: I wrote this for a Hobsons internal thing for the “People Leader” group, when asked to write on the topic of motivation and employee engagement.]
This is a completely unsolicited post; the good folks at The Pragmatic Studio have no idea that a random person on the Internet (me) plans to say nice things about them.
I'm not going to lie, this post is primarily for my friends on the Careers 2.0 team at StackExchange.
A recent blog post from the folks at Code Climate (a highly recommended hosted static analysis tool for Rubyists) highlighted a study that found what the researchers deemed "The Unexpected Outcomes...
At my last job, one of the things I did was re-form a development team; I anchored it by hiring two exceptional people I worked with before, but that left two other open positions that I advertised...
With all due respect to my partner, I am totally in love with StackExchange, the network of Q&A sites that began with StackOverflow.
As someone who has made a decent secondary income for the last twelve years writing technical books, a recent post in the SD Times caught my eye: “Are tech books dead?”…
When I read the Chronicle piece, “I’ll Never Do it Again“—about one professor’s negative experiences teaching online—I thought to myself, “Great! Don’t."
First Computer: | TRS-80 |
Favorite Editor: | textpad, vi, sublime |