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on Apr 12, 2012

Björn Pollex

Berlin, Germany

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Currently Software Engineer at Younicos, Inc..

I am a computer scientist and programmer (in my experience, the two don't always go hand in hand) with an eye for details. I appreciate elegant solutions - as developer as well as as user.

The most important skill I have is learning - I can work myself into problems and new technologies quickly, and independently. I can do so even quicker if I have colleagues to talk to.

Colleagues are important - a job with the most interesting tasks and projects can be spoiled by bad teamwork, and good teamwork can make dull tasks fun (I am not exaggerating).

I am looking for a working atmosphere that encourages new approaches, and is willing to adapt new ideas.

Technologies


Experience show all

Software Engineer, Younicos, Inc.

2011 - Current

I am currently working as a Software Engineer for the Younicos, Inc..

Originally hired as a C++-programmer, I am currently doing mostly Java-development using OSGi (which is an awesome framework). We are working in a small team and I am involved in every step of the project-lifecycle.

Besides programming I am also helping to establish automated workflows and improving our infrastructure. As part of this task I have advocated (and executed) the introduction of JIRA for issue-tracking. I have also driven the introduction of Maven for project management in Java, and I am currently helping to set up a Subversion-structure (along with usage-guidelines) that will unify our project-layout, providing a foundation for a fully automated build- and testing-workflow.

Research Assistant, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

April 2011 - September 2011

Research assistant in the Group for Knowledge Management in Bioinformatics.

My primary task was to hold two exercises a week for the Course Algorithms and Data-Structures (the audience consist mainly of second semester bachelor students). Together with three colleagues (who held the other 6 exercises for this course) I was responsible for supervising the students, planning the contents of the exercises and creating the homework assignments and tests.

My secondary task was to develop a small web-application for curating text-mining results. The main challenge here was to design an architecture that makes the tool integrate easily with different databases. Apart from the database, which already exists, I was in charge of everything from design to implementation.

Student Assistant, Fraunhofer Heinrich-Hertz-Institute

2006 - 2011

I was working in the Interactive Media Department in the Media Management Group.

Most of my time was spent working on a library for synchronous navigation in multiple video-streams. During my time it was decided to rebuild the entire system from scratch, creating a system of components that we could reuse in various projects. Since I had done a lot of legacy support and bug-fixing on the old system, I was involved in the design and implementation of the new library from the start.

Most of my colleagues came from a C or Java background, which put me in the role of the local C++-expert. Since the project was to be implemented in C++, I was often asked for counsel on C++-related problems (explaining RAII in all it's manifestations over and over - I consider myself very patient, and I like explaining things).

Along with another co-worker I successfully advocated the use of tools like Trac, Subversion (replacing CVS) and Visual Assist X. I also helped in developing a standard layout for our Visual Studio 2005 solutions, which was enforced by a set of custom wizards I implemented.

Education

Computer Science Graduate, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

2003 - 2011

In the summer break of 2009 me and a fellow student offered a voluntary course with the title Advanced Practices of Software Engineering. The course was aimed at students up to the fourth semester. Our motivation was to show them some of the things they do not learn at the university, and some things they might not learn at most other places. The topics included:

  • Design Patterns
  • Pair Programming
  • Refactoring
  • Unit-Testing

The course took place over one week, 6 hours each day. The first 2 hours would be a talk given by us, and the rest of the day they would work on their practical assignments.

The students worked on their practical assignments in pairs, and we encouraged them to use pair-programming. We organized chess-clocks for them, so they could keep track of their times (they were told to switch positions at least every ten minutes).

My experience with this was very positive. It was very interesting to see how differently the students dealt with the tasks (some needed a lot of help while others needed extra tasks). We also received a lot of positive feedback from the students (we had 8 attendees).

My second subject was biology, and I focused on genetics here. I wrote my thesis on improving an existing algorithm for protein function prediction (Exposé, pdf).

Stack Exchange show all Last seen today

Reading

Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software

Design Patterns

Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software

Erich Gamma, Richard Helm, Ralph Johnson, John M. Vlissides

This book introduced me to the idea of Design Patterns. Even though I have learned many patterns and variants of patterns elsewhere, this book made me realize how important and powerful the concept of design patterns can be.

The most important aspect of design patterns, at least in my opinion and experience, that comes directly from this book, is the ability to easily communicate complex ideas. Saying things like Use a factory or Use an iterator have become very natural to me.


Tools

486 (with mathematical co-processor :)

Emacs