Strive not to be a success, but rather to be of value. –Albert Einstein
I didn't expect HTML editors to become my focus, but Ephox (aka Tiny) been a good fit for for me and I have had a huge variety of tasks and technologies to work on.
My favourite quote is a rarely used one from John Carmack about what motivates him:
Most of the motivation remains internal. Being able to see The Right Thing, then program it into existence out of thin air is still the core wonder of programming for me.
The interview was published during my second year of uni, and I've held onto that quote ever since.
Likes: | ocaml javascript java iphone macos linux reason typescript |
Dislikes: | javascript |
After 7 years as Senior Engineer (with other titles, but no role change) I was promoted to Principal Engineer.
I focussed on making Textbox.io as good as it can be, so I was primarily working in JavaScript, but as one of the most experienced engineers on the team providing advice to the Java side of the business was still part of my role until we retired the product.
I was primarily Technical Lead, and occasionally Team Lead, for our JavaScript editors; most of this time was spent on Textbox.io but in August 2018 I was moved across to focus on TinyMCE.
During this time I also successfully initiated a project developed in ReasonML and released it to production.
As the core business at Ephox became more dependant on ageing technologies, the team was split into a small group focussing on maintenance and minor features and a growing group working on a JavaScript editor intended to be the future of the company.
I was moved across to the new group to leveraging my 12 years of authoring experience and help ensure that we create a high quality suitable replacement.
My pet project during this time was investigating ocaml as a strong language and a leader in the rising AltJS pack.
My blog post "why ocaml, why now" written in March 2014 hit hackernews and received 17,000 views. In February 2015 it hit hackernews a second time and received another 16,000 views.
Technical lead for all aspects of Ephox authoring products; migrating from pure Java responsibilities into technical leadership covering both EditLive! for Java and the Ephox TinyMCE offering.
Co-ordinated technical moves across the Java codebase.
Managing technical aspects of all customer support issues.
Helped to establish a high standard of quality in bug reports, both internal and to our third party vendors. One comment:
The bugs raised by you and your team at Ephox are often of the highest quality I have seen.
This is when I officially became the Lead Engineer / Team Lead / Technical Lead / whatever you want to call it of the EditLive! Java product. I gained recognition as the codebase expert on ~200k lines of Java code.
As technical lead, I helped to guide future direction of the product as the CMS market began to shift further away from Java applets towards JavaScript-based editors. Despite the industry focus, our Java applet was successful in this period.
Once I completed my university degree I was hired on full time. EditLive! for Windows was no longer the core of the business by this stage, with the Java product finally gaining traction (culminating in the release of Windows Vista, which removed the core ActiveX technology EditLive! for Windows relied on).
Starting in 2005 I transitioned over to working on the Java product. I worked my way up the responsibility ladder, and in July 2007 when the lead developer moved to the UK I took over that responsibility.
This was a part time role, 30hr/week while maintaining a 50% course load at university.
By the end of my work experience the main developer of EditLive! for Windows had left, and I was hired as his replacement. This left me soley responsible for maintenance and feature requests.
I learnt a lot about customer satisfaction, and compromises in the product to keep customers happy without sacrificing stability.
Spent the summer holidays doing my required 12 weeks of work experience, working on EditLive! for Windows (later known as EditLive! ActiveX).
My primary role was assisting with bug fixes on the support team, initially just replication and fix verification but before long I was working in the codebase to fix bugs myself as well.
I've compiled my list of courses completed - with certificates where available - on my blog:
Joined Ephox for the course-mandatory work experience at the end of my third year, and after they hired me I balanced 30hrs a week + 50% course load to finish the final year worth of study in two years.
It was difficult to do while maintaining 75% full time at work, so my GPA isn't fantastic, but it's just a piece of paper. I quickly realised my industry experience would provide as much value as the degree by the time I finished.
TinyMCE is a platform independent web based Javascript HTML WYSIWYG editor control released as Open Source under LGPL.
I moved to full time development on TinyMCE in July 2018, leveraging my years of HTML editor experience.
RxJS examples ported to Java
rX is an awesome technology, so I'm taking the JavaScript examples and using advanced functional-style Java techniques we use at Ephox to show how even ol' Java can do it.
Developers notice small details that many people don't. Here's what we found when working on improvements to our spell checking services.
A repost of my blog on the company website
My thoughts about big changes in TinyMCE 5
The WebKit team recently released a significant update that delivers many improvements to the handling of content interactions with the clipboard. The TinyMCE team was a major contributor to several of these improvements. Here's how it happened.
(reposted in Jan 2019)
Engineer Andy Herron tells the story of the migration to vanilla ES5 at Tiny, and explores the future of TinyMCE with TypeScript. We also share Millie Macdonald's presentation at ForwardJS 2019.
A brain dump of research I did into OCaml between November 2013 and March 2014.
Picked up on reddit and hackernews with close to 200 comments in the discussion, even tweeted by Erik Meijer, the post peaked at 16,000 views in a 24hr period.
Apple wants everybody to use digital audio for multi-channel output. This post explains how to do it with a multi-channel analog sound card over USB.
A post that maintains popularity at a couple of thousand views a month, information that Apple doesn't make clear about how to implement backup rotation with Time Machine.
Information I discovered about migrating from a combined frontend/backend MythTV setup to a split setup.
Rich Text editor written in JavaScript
A brand new JavaScript editor. This is the replacement for the EditLive! Java Swing editor, leveraging the latest HTML5 and CSS3 technologies.
iPhone companion for the Coverville podcast
This was a spare time project between 2009 and 2011. I've now abandoned it.
I was the sole developer of this app. It ties heavily into the Coverville website features; it has a complete offline copy of the cover search database and is able to stream recent episodes by parsing the RSS feed.
It was not a major success but I did make a little bit of money from it.
Rich Text editor written in Java Swing
See my employment history for full details. I was the codebase expert and technical lead for the EditLive! project from mid 2007 until I moved to Textbox.io in 2014.
The editor runs as either an in-browser Applet or a Swing component.
I'd describe what it does, but TinyMCE etc are so popular now I think I'd be wasting my time. It does that, only better :)
This app has been around since 1999 when it was written in ActiveX, the rewrite in Java was released in 2001.
My parents resisted buying a computer until I was 12, but I've been hooked on computers since the age of about 9.
In high school, I was one of those people who took nibbles.bas and with a few friends beefed it up to 4 simultaneous players plus cheat codes. We were regularly kicked out of the library for making too much noise until they locked the computers down!
It was an upward trend from there.
First Computer: | 486SX 25mhz |
Favorite Editor: | sublime, vim, intelliJ |