I've worked as a software developer for the last 15 years or so, and am always on the lookout for "what comes next". I've been doing mostly back-end work my entire career, and I think I'm spent; I'm primarily interested in front-end (including design), SRE or hardware-related work at this point in my career.
I am currently interested in Seattle-area work only (I recently bought a house here), but remote work and travel are both options (I may be the last person on earth who actually likes going to the airport).
Please read this before contacting me about employment.
Likes: | c++ javascript python html5 node.js |
Dislikes: | com xml |
This was one of the few jobs in my career that didn't have me learning a new language (this company and Instructure both use Rails) so I was able to hit the ground running and get to some important Rails upgrades in the first two months on the job
I am a senior software engineer attempting to bring SRE-like practices to my team; in particular, I am working on implementing monitoring and automatic detection of certain types of problems.
My most recent projects involved visualization of various aspects of our production system, including performance and black-box automated tests.
As a site reliability engineer:
As a backend engineer:
As both:
I was one of a handful of programmers in a growing startup company. I wrote code that spoke to a motor and a camera, part of a system for mapping areas. I enjoyed testing my code, as that occasionally involved mounting the system on light aircraft.
While in highschool and for several years after, I helped out as a jack-of-all-trades in a small company (6-15 employees, depending on the time). Besides some internals work on the company's flagship product (a text indexing and retrieval service), I also worked on projects from start to finish: a system for testing our product (I admit to some NIH syndrome both on my part and on my boss's), and a web demonstration of a new product. A new product, a system for finding paths in graphs (used for "six-degrees-of-separation" applications) was also based partially on my ideas.
I took graduate level courses for a year before moving to New York.
This includes courses I took throughout middle- and high school, while I was working and through graduation.
I started blogging in early 2017. We'll see if it sticks... :-)
A short, six-week course intended to convey the basics of UI design to people from outside the field. While I had been interested in UI for a while, I had never had formal training before.
First Computer: | VIC-20 |
Favorite Editor: | Vim |