Likes: | ruby-on-rails postgresql lucene elasticsearch python elixir rust |
Premise provides a platform that enables human-powered data collection in the physical world. I work on backend systems primarily in Scala and Java running on Google Cloud Platform. In addition to building new features, I have focused on improving performance and optimizing developer productivity.
As the first non-founder engineer in a small startup, I am responsible for a lot of tasks in and out of engineering. I work on the core application, our web crawler, write client libraries for our API in numerous languages, and add features to our WordPress plugin. In addition to software engineering, I have written public API documentation, spoken at conferences on behalf of Swiftype, provided customer support, and recruited engineers.
Selected projects:
Fundamental Constant is my consulting company. I mostly develop web applications using Ruby on Rails and Google App Engine.
Through Fundamental Constant, I've worked on projects ranging from enterprise cost management to peer-to-peer lending. I've built apps for tiny startups and Fortune 500 companies.
When not working on customer applications, I like developing applications to learn new technologies. Lately, I have been working with non-relational datastores like Redis, MongoDB, and Neo4J and exploring new web technologies like Node.js.
I initially joined FanChatter to build its Scoreboard Photo Sharing application, which allows fans to see themselves on the jumbotron. It's used by teams like the Minnesota Twins, Chicago Fire, and the University of Minnesota.
Later, I drove our successful application to Y Combinator. FanChatter was funded by Y Combinator in Summer 2009.
During the YC program, I built ChatterBox, a Twitter and Facebook-based chat widget. It is used by sites like Timberwolves.com and Philly.com.
With a talented team of contractors, I built tumblon.com, a web app for parents with young children. Features include a development tracker, blog, photo and video uploads, and a database of developmentally appropriate toys and books.
I became a big proponent of usability testing in the Steve Krug mode while working on Tumblon. Simply bringing in outsiders helped us clarify what we were doing wrong.
I worked as senior Rails developer on a many of Slantwise Design's projects.
Projects included:
And lots of other things.
In this time I also started speaking about Ruby on Rails at conferences, including acts_as_conference and Ostrava on Rails.
In late 2005, the Ancept Media Server group at Stellent was spun out as a separate company.
I led the development of the AMS 3.8 release.
I also pushed hard for a web services API based on the then-emerging REST paradigm. I specified and managed the development of the AMS REST web services API, then wrote extensive developer documentation for integrators.
In 2003, Stellent acquired Ancept. Development on Ancept Media Server (AMS) continued.
As part of a small team of developers, I wrote several important components for Ancept Media Server, a web-based digital asset management system using Java, DB2, and IBM Content Manager.
I was responsible for major portions of our rewrite to support Content Manager 8.
I also implemented content ingest folders, a reporting system, added screens for the Java Swing-based admin application, and experimented with integrating Lucene to provide full-text search.
I started at the University of Minnesota Libraries as a student webmaster, building standalone websites for projects and maintaining the main Libraries website, which was entirely coded in flat HTML.
The pain of updating the HTML of the site set me off on my career as a programmer. I figured out how to use Apache Server Side Includes to save us a ton of work.
Later, when we redesigned the site, I built a simple CMS using PHP and MySQL to manage the pages. Apparently, they still use some of my code to this day. Yikes!
Example app that shows how to use Rack::SSL and Rack::Auth::Basic to forward all requests to SSL, then password protect them.
download email from POP3 or IMAP and do stuff with it.
Simplifies the population of test databases with validated records, and lets you refer to the records in tests like fixtures.
xss_terminate is a plugin in that makes stripping and sanitizing HTML stupid-simple. Install and forget. And forget about forgetting to h() your output, because you won‘t need to anymore.
I'd like to share some lessons I learned about upgrading a large Rails application with minimal problems.
This tutorial shows how to create a query parser that can generate queries for the Elasticsearch query DSL and describes the benefits of building your own query parser.
Timekeeping causes many software bugs. What makes time so difficult and how did it get that way?
I'm a developer. I barely know what Nagios is, let alone how to set it up or configure new alerts. But I do know a lot about the application I'm working on, and I know how to code. By building a framework for easily adding new monitoring rules, the operations team at Swiftype has opened up application-level monitoring for the whole development team.
A retrospective on the influence and legacy of Ruby on Rails, ten years after its introduction.
Implementing a simpler version of a technology that you use every day can help you understand it better. In this article, we will apply this technique by building a simple HTTP server in Ruby.
This is a talk for front-end testing skeptics (like me): It is possible to create tests that drive your web UI that are automated, fast, reliable, headless and written in pure Ruby instead of some obtuse syntax.
A from-the-ground-up tutorial to the D3.js visualization library.
Guest Post for the Google App Engine Blog about using the Channel API.
PeepCode ebook about processing email with Ruby, featuring the MMS2R gem and fetcher plugin.
I wrote the "Receiving E-mail Reliably via POP or IMAP" chapter for Advanced Rails Recipes.
Back in the ancient days, I wrote this article for Java.net about running individual JUnit test cases with Ant.
Favorite Editor: | Emacs |