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Jeff Lunt

Evanston, IL, United States

jefflunt.com

Currently Systems Analyst/Programmer at Northwestern University/NUCATS Institute, and Software Developer at KarmaNebula.com.

I code because it is the single, greatest expression of creativity that I have ever found. Coding isn't just the ability to translate an idea into working software, it's the ability to focus vast amounts of technology toward a specific goal or end, for the betterment of the world.

More than any other force that I've experienced, coding has the power to instantly change the way we interact and communicate, how we see the world, and allows any of us to instantly access massive amounts of data about any topic that we could desire in mere seconds.

With the advent of hardware abstracted cloud platforms, coding is reaching a new audience of creative people who have discovered what they can do with a simple text editor, and a great idea.

Technologies

Experience (8)

Systems Analyst/Programmer

Northwestern University/NUCATS Institute

August 2011 - Current

I build and maintain web apps used in clinical research studies. Currently I'm the main developer of an application called "Registar," used to match volunteers with potential, ongoing medical studies.

I also work on the maintenance and support team for two additional projects, NUBIC's eNOTIS, and the Illinois Women's Health Registry.

I also write the occasional blog post for NUBIC.

Software Developer

KarmaNebula.com

January 2010 - Current

KarmaNebula is a software development company I started to build and promote my own software projects, which include my newest venture, plebd.com, a community file sharing site; and rpglogger.com, a site I built for fun to track my progress in Skyrim.

KarmaNebula projects have been deployed to a number of platforms, including Slicehost (now part of Rackspace), Heroku, and AWS. I do all my own deployment automation and server management.

Web Developer

InfoBahn Outfitters/Media309

May 2011 - August 2011

Custom web app development for a range of companies in and around Illinois. We primarily serve as a development and custom web design firm for small business. I worked as part of a remote team, headquartered in Colchester, IL, while I lived in Evanston, IL. I worked primarily from home, and simply collaborated with my coworkers via phone calls, email, and the occasional GoToMeeting.

I left this position on good terms after a short period of time to pursue an opportunity at Northwestern University doing Rails development. I talk about the experience (and my decision to leave) openly in this blog post.

Technical Support Engineer

ProNet Solutions

May 2010 - May 2011

My current role is essentially to prevent issues from the front-line support folks from being escalated to the engineering team, who should spend the majority of their time working on projects that represent billable time. The role requires a mix of customer support skills, engineering know-how and tricks, as well as an ability to work with anyone in the company to get things done for the customer.

It's more than simply a support role, however. I'm also asked to participate in new implementations and upgrades to existing systems on the engineering team. When the front-line support folks have issues with a newly installed/updated product they come to me first for assistance. Also, when the engineering team needs an extra hand due to resource constraint, I change hats and help them build things, whether that be during the day, or on nights & weekends.

In the "random" category, I also provide Saturday support to our customers who pay for weekend support. This role used to be filled by two people, but now that I'm in the role it only requires one, due to my renowned reliability, broad customer knowledge, and ability to figure out a solution to novel problems on the fly.

IT Coordinator

ProNet Solutions

October 2009 - May 2010

After working for ProNet as a Team Lead for two years, I was looking for my next role. An opportunity to help a customer who was struggling came up, and I was offered a chance to be an IT Coordinator.

My responsibility was primarily to work with the customer to coordinate the delivery of technical services from various suport teams within ProNet, in addition to being available for on-site work at the customer's locations, and occasional after-hours engineering work (application upgrades, trouble issues, etc.) Finally, I was also created new customer-specific documentation and training for our support teams in order to make the training of new team members more efficient.

TSC Team Lead

ProNet Solutions

November 2007 - October 2009

Team Leads directly supervise TSCs. After working in the entry level postion at ProNet for just under a year I received this promotion and began leading a team that handled inbound customer requests.

After several months as a Team Load the company expanded its call center staff from its headquarters in Phoenix into an office in Chicago. I volunteered to lead the new team in Chicago, and hired, trained, and supported an all-new team.

By August 2008 I was running the team in the Chicago office, where I stayed for the next year.

Technical Support Consultant (TSC)

ProNet Solutions

December 2006 - November 2007

The entry level position at ProNet Solutions: I worked primarily in a call center taking inbound calls for support issues that could come from anyone at a client site from front-line customer service reps, or the CEO of a client company.

ProNet's support center is not structured in the typical fashion, however. While TSC's do take the typical "Level 1" tech support issues, they also work and administer servers, setup new user accounts, configure email, services, and other advanced tasks. TSCs can move up in responsibility as quickly as they are comfortable taking on new technologies.

Education Technology Specialist

Cartwright School District

2001 - 2006

I began this role as the entry-level support technician, before being promoted into the full-time role.

I was part of a small IT Department that supported 24 sites, over 7,000 desktops, email and file servers for each site, and a Cisco-based network. We were 90% Mac OS support in the schools, with Windows at the district offices, and a few proprietary applications, such as our web-based student data management system.

In addition to the support role, I was part of the hiring committee for our department, and took an active role in training and guiding our part-time staff.

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Education

Studied Computer Science and Anthropology

Arizona State University

1998 - 2003

The question of my eduction comes up often. I didn't finish college.

I spent my time building software that I cared about, not wasting a lot of time plodding through a long list of programming exercises which I already knew how to solve. I spent almost all my coding time, from high school on through college and beyond, actually building something functional, useful, and fun.

When I was younger it was video games. From text adventures in the early days and modest RPG with "Temple of the Labyrinth", to multiplayer/network code on a turn-based Java game called "Conquer", coding is my first love.

As I grew older I began to get interested in more serious apps, you might say. Now I'm a web developer who is creating a better, trust-backed community commerce site, FeelGoodTrader.com.

I don't spend time trying to look good to everyone, nor am I interested simply in having my resume contain all the right buzzwords. I'm just too busy actually building things that people can see, feel, and touch. I'm not talking about doing it, I'm actually doing it.

Stack Exchange Last seen today

Open Source

keyspace

A distributed way of generating unique 128-bit keys, for any purpose.

Jul 2011 - Current; followed by 3 people

Primary developer


feelgoodtrader

Web app code from feelgoodtrader.com

Jun 2011

Former owner/developer for FeelGoodTrader.com.


pedestrians

A Pedestrian simulation/game.

Jun 2011 - Current

Primary developer.


Writing

They call it "pivoting"

Work, passion, and ultimately choice

The pivot in the professional end of my life took about two years from concept to reality, and much of the payoff has come in the last six months...


t3chnically b0rk3d - Technology is terribly, often stupidly complicated

KarmaNebula - t3chnically b0rk3d

So, let's say you love to write: short stories, poetry, music lyrics, whatever it is you love. When you first started writing you probably went to a bookstore, bought a...


An environment for great work

WorkPassionChoice.com

The last month has seen some major changes to my work environment. For one thing, I now work from home as part of a remote team. Not a lot of people know what that...


Reading

Books

StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

Agile Web Development with Rails, Third Edition

Sam Ruby, Dave Thomas, David Heinemeier Hansson

This book broke down my fears over the mountain of technology I would need to learn in order to implement a modern web application. Ruby on Rails was also the first domain-specific language/framework I'd worked in. Before Rails, I always preferred the broad scope of languages such as Java, believing that mastering a language that was built to do anything was a solid investment of time. While it's true that broad languages are good for general purpose coding, I've found Rails a pleasure to work in when working on web services. The baked-in TDD, and a mindset centered on web security make the framework well worth the time investment.


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

Clean Code

A Handbook of Agile Software Craftsmanship

Robert C. Martin


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

Test Driven Development

By Example

Kent Beck

This book completely changed the way I write software. My favorite side effects of test-driven development are the clarity it can bring to your code design by starting the coding process by thinking about how the resulting implementation will be used, rather than built, and the productivity gains you get from writing quality tests without needing 100% code coverage.


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

Hackers & Painters

Big Ideas from the Computer Age

Paul Graham


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

Concurrent Programming in Java

Design Principles and Pattern

Doug Lea

Multi-threaded code seems to be one of those topics that few coders utilize, let alone understand. I just thought this book was awesome in learning how to write multi-threaded code, and I don't see why more people don't want to take advantage of it. Even if all you do is write task servers with worker threads, concurrent code has many advantages when it comes to a certain class of issues.


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

First, Break All the Rules

What the World's Greatest Managers Do Differently

Marcus Buckingham, Curt Coffman

After you learn the rules, it's equally important to understand when to question them.


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Articles & Blogs

Gary Vaynerchuk: Do what you love (no excuses!) | Video on TED.com

TED: Ideas worth spreading

TED Talks At the Web 2.0 Expo, entrepreneur Gary Vaynerchuk gives a shot in the arm to dreamers and up-and-comers who face self-doubt. The Internet has made the formula…


People who don't run your company

Thisisgoingtobebig.com

It's important that running your own company means you're in charge. As with any leadership position, you're expected to actually lead. Take advice and counseling from those more experienced, but ultimately make the decision yourself.


Evidence Based Scheduling

Joel on Software

Four ways to make realistic schedules a reality. For real.


It takes three years to build a business

Important timelines to remember when building a business.


Premature Optimization

Cunningham & Cunningham, Inc.

We should ignore optimizing up-front, pretty much 97% of the time. Getting too many details into your system before you've even got the demo up and running doesn't provide useful optimization feedback, and wastes programmer time.


Tools

second-hand Franklin ACE 1000, an Apple ][e clone from a company that got sued out of existance

TextMate for Rails, Eclipse for Java

Background


Background

I'm that guy who fundamentally loves to tinker and build stuff. I code because it's the single greatest creative outlet I've ever discovered, and I can't get enough of it.

From the beginning I've been a developer who is self-taught. Glorious were the days of my Apple ][ clone, where I could simply "LOAD PROGRAM" and then "LIST", and all the lines of BASIC and Assembly code would just come flowing out onto the screen like a treasure trove of secret knowledge. I wrote my first text adventure that summer, long after the time that text adventures were popular. But what did I care? This thing was way cooler than my Atari 2600, because I could actually build my own stuff!

Several years later, I went to high school, and got some formal training in coding - I was in absolute heaven! My sophomore year I asked my parents for a Borland Turbo Pascal 7.0 compiler, which I received. I then proceeded to work with a creative writer friend of mine for the next year on the best Ultima II rip-off you ever did see - Temple of the Labyrinth - complete with an annoying parrot sidekick that made fun of you when you got yourself killed. I turned in that game as my final project for Junior year. You can imagine the looks of the faces of my classmates who spent a pithy 2 weeks on their projects. My game had a dialog editor, a map and tile editor, as well as a full-on game engine with characters and towns and battles and stuff.

In college I was the guy who showed up to programming classes only to obtain a new trick or algorithm. I was way too busy building software on my laptop to actually listen to most of what was going on. I just wanted to pass the test, and get back to coding. I was easily spending 30+ hours a week outside of class just working on my own projects.