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on Apr 19

AJ Kerrigan

NJ, United States

Top 20% Stack Overflow for
Currently Systems Analyst at Chubb Services Corporation.

I got started with programming as a child. Some of my earliest and most memorable experiences include making the computer talk with BASIC programs on the family TI-99/4A, learning C through text-based games (MUDs), and teaming up with friends to alter the QBasic game 'Gorillas' that was packaged with early versions of DOS.

In later years I made professional use of my interest in programming, working as a Java developer and C++ tutor. Though my current job did not initially involve any development work, that has become a vital part of my role over time. I have increasingly relied on programming and scripting to deliver efficiency and "quality of life" improvements, for my own team as well as other groups within the company.

To me, "thinking like a programmer" means being hungry to learn and solve problems with a blend of analysis and creativity. I believe that this mindset is difficult to teach or assess, though it is more valuable than any bullet point list of technical qualifications.

Technologies


Experience

Systems Analyst, Chubb Services Corporation

2001 - Current

  • Developed and implemented a single sign-on module for a vendor-supplied claim system.
  • Authored a Powershell module to make common IT management/administrative functions more efficient, less error-prone, and usable by less technical team members.
  • Created a system to automate the backup, deployment and rollback process for vendor-supplied application updates.

Education show all

M.S. Information Systems (Information Security), Stevens Insitute of Technology

2005 - 2008

Received the MSIS program's Outstanding Academic Achievement award.

B.S. Biomedical Computing, Rochester Institute of Technology

1998 - 2001

Completed a four year degree program in three years of study.

Stack Exchange show all Last seen today

Reading show all

Books

Pro Git (Expert's Voice in Software Development)

Pro Git

Scott Chacon

Git was an intriguing tool to me, but it initially seemed unnecessarily complicated compared to Mercurial. After reading this book, I had a much better handle on how to think like a Git user and get a sensible workflow in place.


Programming WCF Services

I read this book in preparation for a project which required interaction with WCF services. I had limited experience with web services at the time, and no access to the source code for the third-party application that supplied the services. This book helped me understand how WCF services work, how they grew out of the older style ASMX services and (most importantly) how I could achieve what I wanted.


web2py (3rd Edition)

web2py

Massimo Di Pierro

I am primarily exposed to Microsoft technologies at work, so reading this book gave me some valuable insight into a popular alternative to Microsoft's web frameworks. I was impressed by Massimo Di Pierro's efforts to create a framework that was useful for both educational and production applications. His book and website explain the details of web2py, but just as importantly they highlight the motivations and inspirations behind design decisions. Since web2py was largely inspired by Rails and Django, I accidentally learned a bit about those frameworks as well!


Articles & Blogs

Prompts and Directories - Even Better Git (and Mercurial) with PowerShell - Scott Hanselman

Scott Hanselman's Blog

Scott Hanselman shares some thoughts on making Git and Mercurial more useful from within Powershell.


How to Break Into Security — Krebs on Security

Brian Krebs interviews various security experts to get their views on how younger/newer professionals can break into the field.


Coding Horror: How to Talk to Human Beings

A good non-technical article that takes a step back and discusses human communication.


Tools

TI-99/4A

Sublime Text 2