KnockoutJS and Testing
Software Development
KnockoutJS is a JavaScript framework for making it easy to quickly create complex data based pages in browsers as old as IE6. It does this by though the use of a data-bind property for HTML elements…
Toronto, ON, Canada
I started out as a Systems Administrator working with Solaris, Windows NT, Linux and xBSD systems in the late 90′s. I quickly realized that my best days involved software developers asking for something – figuring out how to build a web cluster was much more interesting than fixing printers and blackberries. This got me more interested in what we’d call Operations or DevOps today.
My natural leadership abilities led me to director roles early on. In the last ten years of my career I’ve been the CTO of three innovative organizations, and I’ve learned a lot from the each of them. I also fell in love with developing software. Over the last six years, I’ve built large scale web applications in .NET, and learned several other languages including JavaScript, Java, Ruby, Scala, PHP, Perl and Python along the way.
I discovered ThoughtWorks in 2011 at a meeting of the XP Toronto group, which focuses on extreme programming techniques. Sean Doran (a former ThoughtWorker) was giving a talk on agile Program Management, and I remember that his presentation was like a lightning bolt. I had found my tribe.
As I read more, and interacted with more ThoughtWorkers, I became more and more impressed. Happily, I joined ThoughtWorks in August of 2012. I’ve had the opportunity to work on some amazing projects since then, with many of the finest minds in technology today. I’ve worked with amazing clients, travelled to the US, and even Africa (we have offices in South Africa and Uganda) to help with projects. It’s been a life changing experience.
August 2012 - Current
As part of the Toronto ThoughtWorks team, I've been involved in consulting engagements working with some of the brightest minds in technology today. We've helped to solve tough technology, organizational, and business problems for clients in many industries, including television and media, social analytics, financial, not for profits, NGO organizations, and major retailers.
Java, MongoDB, Solr, AngularJS, Selenium
Currently Technical Principal for a large, complex, co-sourced, distributed Software Development team split across both client developers and ThoughtWorkers in both India and the USA. We are creating a platform for innovation capable of reducing lead times for new projects while enabling rich communication between the client, a tier one national retailer in the USA, and their digital customers.
C#, .NET 4, ASP.NET MVC4, EntityFramework, RavenDB, KnockoutJS, TDD, pair-programming
Groovy, Grails, JQuery, KnockoutJS, TDD, pair-programming
Java, Scala, JavaScript, MySQL, MongoDB, CouchBase
Ruby, Sinatra, MongoDB, Heroku, TDD, pair-programming
C#, .NET, EntityFramework, Code first, MS-SQL, TDD, pair-programming
August 2012 - Current
Providing direction and consulting to KEV Group on technology and hiring
January 2012 - Current
Along with co-organizer Taz Singh, found members, space, organized food and set the direction for this polyglot programming focused software craftsmanship meetup group.
August 2012 - Current
Supported the group, doing retrospectives of the events, arranging food, attending, organizing and promoting events.
October 2009 - July 2012
To architect, design, and lead a team of software developers in building a new product line for Kev Software's extensive install base and the educational sector in the US and Canada.
The principal new product is an ambitious distributed database application that leverages KEV's existing software to create an entirely new product category, enabling organizations in the K-12 space to do business online in a new way.
2006 - October 2009
eCards - under my leadership, DCR's development team created an entirely new technology offering for our clients that allowed us to create eCard payment technology that users could print on their home computers, and use at many retailers over a major payment network. This project put DCR on a very short list of technology providers with this innovative capability.
Sweepstakes Card Project - I led a project to develop the technology for a 25 million package sweepstakes promotion for a major International processed foods company. Over 2 million payment cards were created for this project.
International Expansion - I led the technology project to develop DCR's infrastructure to expand in to the UK and the EU. I successfully launched DCR's first EU clients in 2009.
In my tenure and under my leadership, DCR grew from a Canadian only operation to a powerful payment card player issuing in four currencies, managing programs with Visa, MasterCard, Discover and others on multiple continents. Fully responsible for technology at DCR Strategies, I managed multiple complex, long-lived vendor relationships, an internal technology department of five, and served on the senior management team.
2003 - 2005
Responsible for Technology at this publicly traded company, I was responsible for the development and management of several innovative insurance and financial industry products.
2003
1998 - 2003
Responsible for IT for this innovative, early Internet marketing company, I started out as the only Systems Administrator. It was up to me to install and managed the companies 20+ Solaris, Windows, Linux, OpenBSD, and FreeBSD servers in addition to 30+ workstations. I would go on to recruit for and lead the IT Department, and eventually led significant software development projects for customers as well.
I installed, configured and managed Exchange and SQL Servers, MySQL and Sybase installations, ISC Bind and DHCPD, IMAP and POP, Sendmail and later qmail mail servers as well. I installed, configured, tuned and maintained Apache JServ and mod_perl application servers and websites spread across hundreds of domain names. I also designed, installed, and managed our security infrastructure, including Checkpoint Firewall-1, Sun EFS, iptables, ipf, ipfw, PoPToP, Apache mod_ssl, and of course OpenSSH.
1997 - 1998
1993 - 1995
2013
GitHub, Feb 2012 - Aug 2012; followed by 3 people
Author / developer / chief bottle washer
Great for wine lovers on a budget, especially in Ontario, this app helps you find amazing bottles that are reasonably priced in the LCBO. We include reviews from several Toronto…
Project owner, sole developer.
School Cash Online is an easy to use, safe way to pay for your children’s school fees.
Team leader, major code contributor, product manager
Software Development
KnockoutJS is a JavaScript framework for making it easy to quickly create complex data based pages in browsers as old as IE6. It does this by though the use of a data-bind property for HTML elements…
Software Development
We’re going to put together a working Scala system on MacOS. We’re going to need a few things: SBT – this is our build system and dependency management IntelliJ – our IDE Scala A few Scala plugins…
Software Development
Recently I noticed a question on StackOverflow that seemed to indicate that a project had encountered problems with the Strangler Application pattern. The basic premise behind the strangler is really…
Software Development
I’ve been working with the Service Stack framework recently. Service Stack is a great SOA framework for building REST (and RPC) based web services – lots of the great things about WCF are in there –…
Payment Networks
I was torn between spending around $500 on a Lenovo Ultrabook or about double that on a MacBook Air. My friend asked, "Why not just get a keyboard for your iPad and use Diet Coda?" so I gave it a try.
Payment Networks
A great way for a .NET developer to build line of business tablet apps that target Android or even iOS, is to leverage JQuery Mobile + Phone Gap Build.
Payment Networks
If you’ve reviewed the API’s of different payment processors, you’ve seen that they’re fairly standard, but with lots of little differences. All in all, they’re well…
Payment Networks
One thing you might notice as you go through the agile process… you can do standup, you can move cards around on a corkboard, you can estimate, do time boxed iterations,…
Payment Networks
Having launched programs on all sorts of payment networks, including Canada’s home grown Interac “PIN debit” system, Visa, MasterCard, Discover, and even Maestro in…
Software Development
A colleague of mine showed me something really cool: a toolchain that helps different people work together on a project involving documentation. With one simple command, the content can be rendered…

Michael Feathers
"Working Effectively with Legacy Code" effectively retrains even the most embattled software developer that is grappling with the problems of adding unit tests to a large extended code base. You'll never see legacy code the same way.

"Making Software: What Really Works, and Why We Believe It" take a scientific approach to discussing many of the popular beliefs of our time, and provides an amazing amount of depth and clarity to what works and what we know about why.

Anticipating and Avoiding the Pitfalls That Can Sink a Startup
Noam Wasserman

The Do-It-Yourself Guide to Finding and Fixing Usability Problems
Steve Krug

A Brief Guide to the Emerging World of Polyglot Persistence
Pramod J. Sadalage, Martin Fowler

Reliable Software Releases through Build, Test, and Deployment Automation
Jez Humble, David Farley

A Comprehensive Step-by-Step Guide, 2nd Edition
Martin Odersky, Lex Spoon, Bill Venners
Atari 800XL
Visual Studio (with ReSharper)
Computers and technology began as a hobby for me that has become a passion. When I was seven years old, my father brought home an Atari 800XL. When it booted up, it went straight to the BASIC programming language. I spent many many hours programming at a young age - I developed a primitive membership database application, typed in games from programming books, simple graphics programming, and even sound programming.
One project came together after realizing that the Atari "paddle" controller that came with the Atari game system could be used with the computer; ATARI BASIC could read the paddle's position and the status of the trigger. The paddle, which was essentially a primitive wheel, would report its position as an integer between 1 and 228. The trigger would either supply a 1 or a 0. The Atari sound system, happily, took four arguments; and the one for "pitch" took a number between 1 and 255.
Of course, once I realized that I could read the paddle position value and feed it to the pitch parameter, and read the trigger position to select distortion, I had whipped together a musical instrument in about an hour. It was amusing and expressive, but otherwise a musical failure.
I usually have some kind of personal coding project going, whether its building an HTML5 mobile app, learning Ruby, or writing tutorials for the Service Stack project, I find the experience of learning new technologies and platforms rewarding and exciting.
My wife and I enjoy camping, canoeing, biking, and hiking in Ontario's many wonderful provincial parks. On our honeymoon we went camping in the Adirondacks, and also in Maine's beautiful Acadia National Forest.