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profile updated
on Jan 31

Jarvis Badgley

San Diego, CA, United States

chipersoft.com

Currently Lead Web Developer at NFY Interactive, Inc.

Jack of All Trades, Renessance Man, Full Service Developer... which ever title you prefer, that's the kind of webdev that I am. From the database communication and server side PHP to the design breakout and client side scripting, I do it all. The more dynamic and complex the application, the more excited I am to be a part of it. I'm the kind of developer who is always looking for a challenge, trying to push web technologies to their limits.

Please note I am not actively looking for new employment. I am very happy with my current employer and continue to keep this page visible to the public for client references.

Technologies

Experience (3)

Lead Web Developer

NFY Interactive, Inc

June 2008 - Current

Solely built and deployed entire web driven applications for third party clients based upon graphic designs provided.

Sites I've built while employed with NFY:

Systems Technician

Abtech Systems

February 2007 - July 2008

Built, refurbished, configured and troubleshot HP & Compaq Servers and Workstations running both Microsoft Windows and HP-UX Unix. Responsible for testing all components and systems prior to shipment to customers. Interacted with salesmen to fulfill orders according to customer demands.

Every quarter Abtech performs a full count of all inventory the company has in its warehouse. When I began working for the company this task was performed by all warehouse and techroom employees carrying laptops with barcode scanners, scanning stickers into Excel documents. This process was rather lengthy, as excel did not know what the data it was receiving contained, and required a lot of input between scanning products.

Noticing a space for improvement, I created an in-house application that worked with the barcode scanners, tailored specifically for our scanning needs. It provided a uniform routine and alerted the user when it encountered discrepancies. The app reduced the time required for performing scans by half and improved accuracy 40%.

Web Developer

WebOS.com, Inc

August 2000 - April 2001

Together with a team of developers I helped to create a JavaScript adaptation of the Java Swing API for building web based applications that ran in a sandboxed desktop. This was two years before the XMLHTTPRequest reached mainstream attention and the term AJAX was coined, five years before Google Maps showed people that JavaScript could create live and dynamic websites that behaved like real applications.

My primary responsibility was Mac browser compliance and UI enhancement, adding functionality to the window manager to make building applications in the WebOS API easier.

I worked from my home in San Diego, California, telecommuting with our offices in Columbia, Maryland.

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Education

A.A. Computer Science

Palomar Community College, San Marcos California

1999 - 2005

Part-time student taking classes I was interested in, gradually working first towards a certification and eventually an associates degree.

Coursework was completed, but I never pursued the final degree. I went to college to learn.

Stack Exchange Last seen 5 days ago

Open Source

Primal

Collection of PHP 5.3 code libraries that collectively form a micro-framework.

Nov 2011 - Current

Sole developer. Primal is the 2.0 revision of phPit, my first PHP framework. It is a library set that has been in development for more than 5 years and has grown as I have grown, sometimes experiencing major shifts in design as I've learned new techniques and expanded into new areas.


wmd

ChiperSoft fork of Open Library's branch of the WMD Editor. WMD is a javascript code editor and parser for the Markdown formatting language.

Sep 2010 - Current; followed by 77 people; forked 10 times

For a long time I had the only active development fork on WMD, progression had stagnated. I forked the most current version of the library and started making improvements where I could. I am currently working on a total rewrite of the editor that will address many of the long standing problems from the original codebase.


Proto.Calendar

A Javascript class for Prototype that adds accessible and unobtrusive date pickers to your form elements

Apr 2011 - Current

This library was originally an extension for the MooTools javascript framework. I ported it over to Prototype.js for use on my own sites, preserving as much of the functionality as possible.


Proto.TimePicker

A time picker control for textfields built using Prototype.js. Inspired by Google Calendar.

Jan 2012

The original timePicker is a jquery plugin. I needed to use the library on a site built upon Prototype.js, so I ported it from a jQuery plugin into a Prototype class, replacing any jQuery specific behaviors with the equivalent calls to Prototype.


Timed

Syntactic sugar for JavaScript's setTimeout() and setInterval()

May 2011 - Current; followed by 40 people; forked 2 times

I was inspired by jQuery-Chrono, a similar project which added cleaner means of creating timed events in JavaScript. As it's name implies, jQuery-Chrono was dependent on jQuery. I wanted to create a library that would perform the same task, but be framework-agnostic and significantly smaller.


PayPal-NVP-Transactions

Collection of PHP classes for interfacing with the PayPal NVP API

Jan 2011; followed by 2 people

A project I was working on needed a way to setup recurring billing using PayPal's NVP API. Existing PHP libraries that I found were either overly complicated, or simply didn't work, so I wrote my own. This library is incomplete, as I only implemented the portions of the API that we needed for the project I was working on at the time.


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Apps & Software

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Taskian

A web based task management app losely based on the desktop and iPhone software Things.

Sole developer.


TwitPeek: The Twitterverse, Live!

At it's peak, every day hundreds of thousands of images were uploaded to TwitPic.com, at least one photo every second. TwitPeek takes that stream of photo uploads and displays them as they come in via a live updating view. Since Twitter integrated their own image hosting service TwitPic's usage has dropped significantly, but the service remains active and this site is still functional.

Sole developer.


Writing

Testing websites in IE7 / IE8 / IE9 on a Mac - ChiperSoft::Blog

ChiperSoft Blog

Here's a simple process for getting a 100% legal copy of IE9 running on your mac using VirtualBox and disk images provided by Microsoft themselves.


Why I prefer Prototype over jQuery - ChiperSoft::Blog

Jarvis Badgley, ChiperSoft Systems

Every so often I get asked why I use the Protaculous combination in favor of the much more popular jQuery. After all, jQuery is smaller, often faster, is still being actively developed, and has loads & loads of third-party plugins. Well, this is why...


Reading

Books

StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

Objective-C Phrasebook

David Chisnall

When I was trying to learn Objective-C and Cocoa to get introduced to programming on the Mac and iOS, most of the books and tutorials I found were either far too simplistic (written for people who haven't programmed before) or far too advanced (written for people who were well versed with C and C++). This book was a perfect middle-ground, putting things into a language that someone at my skill level could quickly grasp. It continues to serve as an excellent reference.


Articles & Blogs

Funkatron / The MicroPHP Manifesto

Funkatron / Funkatron.com

Large full-stack PHP frameworks often come with a lot of bulk and features that the majority of sites simply don't need. Ed Finkler puts his foot down and makes a call for more lightweight single purpose libraries in the PHP community.


Stuff you can do with the "Checkbox Hack"

CSS-Tricks

Using a hidden checkbox, you can re-create a lot of functionality on website that rely on clicks and toggled states.

This site continues to impress me with the neat things they do using just CSS3. It's a reminder that no matter how much I think I know about CSS, there's always more to learn.


Tools

Apple PowerMac 6214

TextMate

Background

In 1994 while visiting my local library I found a book on how to create web sites using HTML. With it I wrote my first web page on my grandmother's IBM486. I didn't even have a browser to test my code on, I had to put the files on a floppy disk and take them to the local university's computer lab to see what my pages looked like.

The next year my mother bought our first computer, and with it dialup access to the internet through the local university. I immediately took to hanging out on IRC, and at the time the best IRC client available for the Mac was Ircle. Ircle supported extensive scripting support by way of AppleScript, an automation language built into the Mac OS. This was my first exposure to programming, adapting other people's scripts to perform the functions I wanted them to do, and eventually writing all my own scripts from scratch. I signed up for a web hosting account through a local users group and started making web pages to publish my scripts on.

When Netscape 2 came out I picked up JavaScript, again by tinkering with examples and other people's code, applying what I already knew about programming. At the same time I started working in a (then) new language on the Mac called REALbasic which inspired by Microsoft Visual Basic, but was created from the ground up to be a pure Object Oriented language and did not suffer from many of the issues that early VB had. The language was easy to learn but extremely powerful, and I developed many applications using it. This included a couple paid contract jobs: the Mac OS Classic version of No-IP.com's IP Updater software, and a cross-platform video editing application for a home movie conversion business. It was also in Rb that I wrote my two most successful applications, iTunes Tool (a floating playback controller for iTunes which received almost as many downloads on VersionTracker as iTunes itself), and AthenaIRC (later renamed Minerva IRC).

In 2000 I created a web simulation of the Mac OS desktop using HTML and JavaScript. It had working menus, draggable/resizable windows, functioning icons, all sorts of jazz. By todays standards this is pretty basic stuff, but in 2000 it was cutting edge JavaScript. At the same time a startup called WebOS.com (not to be confused with HP webOS) was creating a similar system themselves. I mentioned their work on my site, which allowed them to find my project through Google. They offered me a job on the development team creating the second version of their system, a JavaScript adaptation of the Java Swing API.

The work was way over my head, but I learned a lot on the job just from looking at the code that the guys I worked with were creating. That winter the dot.com bubble burst and web startups started folding like wet newspapers. We finished the product but then realized that we had nobody to sell it to. The investors pulled out and over the course of a month 90% of the team was laid off. I went back to college and got a job at a bookstore.

In 2003 I started using PHP and wrote my first non-static website, ChiperSoft.com. This included a searchable blog that used static files to store each entry, as I didn't have access to a database at the time. Over the next five years I gradually built up my knowledge of the language by trying new things and tinkering with ideas. In 2007 I created a web front-end for accessing my iTunes collection remotely which I named Musiker. This project imported the iTunes Library XML file into a MySQL database, which the web front-end used to present playable links in a layout very similar to iTunes itself. This project impressed the heads of Netfinity, Inc and they offered me a senior developer position.

In my 4 years at NFY Interactive I've continued to expand and enhance my skills in all fields of web development. I am now well versed in PHP5.3 object-oriented programming conventions, MySQL 5 database structuring, building dynamic and interactive front-ends using HTML5, CSS3, JavaScript and AJAX, interfacing with external APIs using XML and JSON, LAMP server administration, and numerous other responsibilities. I continue to look for new directions to enhance myself as a developer and an employee.