on Jan 15
Constantine Vesna
Technologies
Experience (7) show all
Senior GUI Developer
October 2012 - Current
// do stuff
Senior Web Developer, Hotwire.com
May 2012 - October 2012
Developing Hotwire International.
Front-end Dev Lead, Parcsis / Pravo.ru
2011 - 2012
Manage the small distributed team of front-end developers on a big project (law documents online, over 8 million documents in index, heavy ajax), review code, oversee recruitment, adopt and enforce guidelines and best practices, personally code crucial parts of the system.
But, to be honest, most of the work was fixing bugs in legacy code (loosely based on SproutCore 0.X) and mentoring junior devs.
Web Developer, freelance
2006 - 2011
Beautiful life of a freelancer offers a lot of opportunities to explore diverse range of tasks. From repairing broken sites and creating simple websites, to improving user experience with greasemonkey scripts or saving human time, by making browsers do the job without human intervention, to wiring client-server interaction via XML-RPC, or creating onsite chat without frameworks.
Often, not being bound by cross-browser limitations have gave me a chance to learn new technologies, while the mainstream web was struggling with IE6 support.
Just like any other freelancer, only myself was responsible for negotiations with clients, and finding them. As well as for organizing myself and other management stuff.
On the dark side, most of the work i did in freelance was under NDA - so my portfolio looks very empty after those years ...
Web-developer, Ukrinform, national news agency of Ukraine
2004 - 2006
Being a single web-developer inside a big bureaucratic dinosaur is lonely ;) But you get a chance to wear all the hats you want. Though, at least we had a dedicated in-house graphics designer.
My job was to create various mini-sites (over 20) dedicated to hot topics, major events and organization politics. Notable examples include "Elections 2004", "Eurovision 2005" and "BSANNA News".
As i was not allowed to use MySQL - all my sites used "other means" for databases - starting from .csv +.txt, and moving to xml. This often compromised speed, yet offered some insights in templating and overall framework design.
My first project was site about Golodomor. Finished in just 2 weeks, which was quite nice, and nailing the formula for mini-site: main, gallery, news, about, i18n, div-layouts. Used cvs for making news and image lists, and txt for storing individual articles. Two month after this - we started to make Elections-2004, which took around a month - yet it was huge, by that time... 2500 articles, all bios and photos for 30 candidates (some of whom were never seen before), lots of documents - and all this was also translated to RU and EN, so tripple the numbers. Hard part was - our girls were not exactly willing to maintain the site.. because manually modifying csv sux, big time. That made me bound to my workplace for whole autumn of 2004, yet as this was autumn of Orange revolution, it was still cool ;) It was interesting to meet up with observers, spread news to the world and generally being on a treadmill :D Also, this is still my only site which was featured in articles in major newspapers and national radio.
Next big project was Eurovision2005, it (i think) still used cvs for data tables, but page data was stored in xml. Also it was finally in php4. Also it provided rss feeds, big images (not just links to our pay-to-download site) and even mp3 gallery with all the songs ( wasn't an easy task ;) ).
After that, i thought my life is beautiful, as i approached small task from not-my-regular-vp .. i estimated it to be done within 3-4 weeks. I ended up being removed from the project 7 months later, to be replaced by external studio, and 8 months later the project was finished. (But my point stays valid - i could have been done in 1 months, easily). Anyway, even before that - i parted my ways with agency, becoming a freelancer.
But, before departure, i finished one last project that was a pinnacle of my xml based cmf - BSANNA News. It still works (as of 2011) without any supervision, fixes or updates by me. Which is quite nice, imho.
SEO: All my sites were built with semantic mark-up in mind, and i gave its fruits as all of them were in google top... though, it did not affect daily visitor count much. People don't like reading dull soviet-style news, no matter how good you wrap them ;)
Computer Guy, Kiev National Univercity / freelance
2001 - 2004
Students need money, right ? half-time sys admin in my university, and lots of small tasks for different people. Eventually, web was the most rewarding, so i settled with it.
JS Framework Architect, private
2012
// do stuff
Education
M.S., Kiev National Univercity
1999 - 2006
Got into Ph.D. program, with Information Architecture as subject for thesis.. yet, eventually have reached the conclusion that both IA and Ph.D. are meaningless, and therefore not worthy any further time spent on them.
Stack Exchange show all Last seen 5 days ago
Apps & Software
Classic Minesweeper game, now in HTML5/CSS. Two-button mouse recommended for input. Modern browser required to play.
Author, designer, programmer.
Reading (7) show all

JavaScript Patterns
Stoyan Stefanov
This book is an ABC of professional javascript developer. There is simply no excuse to not read it.

Design Patterns
Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software
Erich Gamma, Richard Helm, Ralph Johnson, John Vlissides
Very good book. For 1990. Recommended read for anyone, who considers himself a programmer, unless they've learned GoF patterns from some other source already.

Information Architecture for the World Wide Web
Designing Large-Scale Web Sites
Peter Morville, Louis Rosenfeld
Good book, very inspirational. Do not take advices literally.

Webbots, Spiders, and Screen Scrapers
A Guide to Developing Internet Agents with PHP/CURL
Michael Schrenk
quite a shallow one, but robots look cool :[ =_ +]:

i think i bought it because i could not get a bear book at the time... there are some good points, but considering that IA is not hip for a long time already - just read the bear book.

PHP and MySQL Web Development, Second Edition
Luke Welling, Laura Thomson
It gave me basic understanding of PHP and helped with tough tasks (like "how to sort an array"). Then, after few weeks, i learned about online manual on php.net, and gave this book to a friend.
Tools
Small, but sturdy DX386 :)
NetBeans

