Likes: | angularjs iphone scala c# r apache-spark machine-learning |
Field engineer in the Japan region, but I wear many other hats
I've participated on a wide range of projects for various global 500 companies. In between projects I've helped modernize the development process to include automated testing, continuous integration and modern source control using Git.
After graduation I did contracting work until my job at JBS started. The jobs ranged from adding features to a PHP-based application to developing a prototype bar-code scanning application on Windows Mobile.
Researched ways to reduce programming errors by using Domain-Specific Modeling. My first project was to automatically port a touch-screen UI model to a completely different embedded platform with only three buttons.
Despite this being my first time using a 16-bit micro controller (with only 4KB of RAM.) I was able to finish the research ahead of schedule. With the extra time I was able to squeeze in another research project developing a prototype Rich Internet Application using only standard web technologies XHTML, JavaScript, and SVG. This was years before HTML5 technologies and libraries like Backbone.
For these projects I wrote the research papers in English but did presentations to the whole division in Japanese.
Customizing popular open-source programs to make them more kid-friendly. I worked on Gaim (now Pidgin) and Mozilla Thunderbird.
Vice President of the Japanese Speaking Society
Certificate of Asian Studies (Focus in Japan)
Won 2nd place in the 24 hour Open Source Game Programming Competition for "Steampunk Calculator" https://github.com/osgcc/osgcc2-SteampunkCalculators
audio library tagger, manager, and player for Linux / Windows / OS X
I developed various plugins for Quod Libet. What started out as a lyrics plugin is now in the core program.
I was still learning python at this stage so my contributions are pretty small. Interestingly though, code from the lyrics plugin is/was used in Rhythmbox as well.
A JavaFX-based Stopwatch writen in Scala
I wrote this little stopwatch utility to help me learn JavaFX.
The Gmail web-app for mobile in it's own process. Great for Android 1.6 devices stuck with the old Gmail client.
Mac OS X Status Bar Application to remind you when you've been working too long.
Presented a quick case study of my team's Service Fabric based virtual assistant at Microsoft Japan's de:code conference.
Did a presentation of how to do text mining of Japanese text with Apache Spark.
Programming is not only my Job, it is my hobby. When I get home I try out other languages (like Haskell and Go) and software (like CouchDB). I've been using a VPS since college not only to host my blog but also to run these experiments.
Made a Facebook app that creates personalized Nengajo (Japanese Christmas cards) from your Facebook photos. (Using Watson and Clarif.ai)
This book has a ton of anecdotal wisdom about managing large projects.
Although not a manager, this book taught me to try and stay away from projects with enormous teams and that throwing more people at a project wont make it finish any faster.
I wish all my managers read this book.
Jeff Atwood highly recommends this book and for good reason. It's one of the few books that describe software engineering in practical terms. I wish there was a class based on this book in University.
Out of University I had a fuzzy idea of what requirements, specs and testing are, but this book turned those ideas into concrete concepts.
This book taught me what it means to be a professional programmer.
Although .NET is one of my dislikes, I have to admit that the tools and frameworks are really good.
The patterns discussed in this book capture the essence of what makes the .NET class library design predictable and easy to use. The patters are in general applicable to any class-based Object-Oriented language.
Using C#'s Language Integrated Query gave me a taste of why functional programming is awesome. Soon after I decided to learn a real functional language. More than Haskell programming concepts, I mostly took away general functional programming concepts from this book.
Learning everyday Haskell concepts (immutable types, function purity, higher-order functions) has definitely made me a better programmer.
As a creator of software, it's effects on society are very important to me. Stallman's ideas about software and society were and still are revolutionary.
I wish everyone would read this book before forming opinions on open-source and Free Software.
I "knew" C before reading this book, but this is the book that really taught me C.
This book also taught me how to make a readable technical book. I read this book cover-to-cover in a couple of nights.
Drucker is an amazing author. He is so good that in Japan there's a best-selling book about a fictional character that read this book and put it's lessons into practice. (Moshi-Dora)
I am working on making a side-business writing Android applications. Unfortunately it isn't working out so well and I believe that it's because I was too focused on the writing software part and not enough on the managing a business part. This book taught me the value in things that I once thought were meaningless, like documenting what the company's business is, and what it should be. As well as the importance of marketing (Marketing is the act of creating customers).
Basically this book recommends functional-programming concepts when writing Java code (immutability, value types, purity, etc.)
Since I read this book after reading Real World Haskell. I kind of expected everything inside. However it is still one of the best books on Java around.
First Computer: | Home built intel 486dx |
Favorite Editor: | Emacs |