on Jan 31
Lawrence Weetman
I am a "Software Engineer in Training". Currently in the fourth and final year of an MEng (masters) in Computing at Imperial College London, I have recently completed a six-month industrial placement at Betfair Limited in Hammersmith. I live in West London with my fiancée Kirsty (a trainee teacher) and our daughter, Evelyn. I am currently looking for a full-time job that I can begin in July, or soon after. This does not have to be in London, as I am happy to commute or relocate.
Whilst at university, I have had experience in many different programming languages. The theoretical nature of the Imperial College degree course also means that I am able to learn new languages with relative ease. The languages in which I have some level of experience range from the functional language Haskell to the logical language Prolog. I am comfortable using Java and C#, but also have some experience in C++, C and BASIC (amongst others).
I have an interest in web programming, from standards-compliant HTML and CSS through to JavaScript and PHP. As editor of Imperial College's student news website, I had experience of integrated PHP and MySQL on a large scale. I am also familiar with the Wordpress API and maintain a number of Wordpress-based websites, all of which are heavily customised and optimised for speed and Search Engine Optimisation (SEO).
For my fourth year individual project (equivalent to a master's thesis) I am writing a "dependable electronic voting system". I have chosen to write this in Ruby-on-Rails, as this is a framework that I have not yet experienced. I hope that this will add a lot to my toolset as I haven't used a language similar to Ruby before, either.
I have plenty of experience in SQL, having extensively used PostgreSQL and MySQL in a significant number of projects. I have also used Microsoft Server 2005 for a group project and an Oracle database whilst at Betfair.
With regards to Operating Systems, I am familiar with all versions of Windows from Windows 95 to Windows 7, having used all of the available variants on personal machines at some point in time. I spent two years working on Apple Mac machines whilst at Sixth Form and have mainly used Ubuntu Linux at Imperial College.
Outside of computing, I have a keen interest in all things historical. I have tried my hand at some light mechanical engineering by looking after Imperial College's motorised mascots. These come in the form of a 1916 fire engine named "Jezebel" and a 1926 truck called "Clementine". We drive the vehicles large distances, break them and then learn how to fix them. This includes a 250-mile round trip to the Isle of Wight and back. Breaking down on a dark country lane in the middle of the island, on a hill between two blind bends really did help to teach me the importance of teamwork and, more importantly, putting trust in others around you!
If you have any questions, then please visit my website and feel free to get in touch.
Technologies
Experience
Ecosystems Analyst, Betfair
April 2011 - Current
I began an internship at Betfair Limited in April 2011. When this internship completed six months later, I returned to my studies but continuted to work on the same project at Betfair on an extremely limited part-time basis.
Whilst at Betfair I was tasked with writing software to simulate a complex model featuring millions of transactions per day. Working with another industrial placement student, the project had a lot of scope for our own creative input. Other than a basic explanation of requirements, no work had yet been done on the project. As such, we were able to follow the project lifecycle right through from concept to testing. This was very rewarding indeed.
When clarifying the requirements and specification of the software, we used many techniques from focus-group style interviews with staff to observation and analysis of historic data. We then created our solution using Visual C# in Visual Studio 2010, with a PostgreSQL 9.0 database providing back-end support. We also had some experience working in C++ and spent a lot of time working with a separate Oracle database for research purposes.
Betfair operates in a highly agile fashion using the scrum methodology. Whilst we were fully exposed to this culture during our internship, the fact that there were only two of us working on our project meant that we were more often than not working in an "extreme programming" (XP) style.
Our software, which was thousands of LOC long, incorporated an NUnit test suite, whilst avoiding cyclic dependencies through good structuring practice and dependency injection was also one of our top priorities.
Betfair also gave me my first glimpse into working for a large, publicly-listed company. I followed the firm's financial reports, share price, culture and management changes closely throughout my placement and beyond.
Education show all
MEng Computing (Software Engineering), Imperial College London
2008 - 2012
Activities:
- Secretary and treasurer of Historic Motor Clubs.
- Editor of student news website.
- Editor of student engineering magazine.
- Editor of engineering student handbook.
- Wrote for student newspaper.
- Produced programmes for student TV station.
- Appeared as a guest on student radio multiple times.
- Engineering student representative on Student Council.
- Student representative to the engineering alumni association.
- Involved in the workgroup for redesigining the student bars.
- Hall senior in Halls of Residence.
Notable achievements:
- "Half Colours" awarded by CGCU in recognition of services to the engineering students' union.
- Documentary produced for stoic tv nominated for a National Student Television Award.
- Helped to stream a concert live over the internet, using multiple cameras.
A Levels, The Blackpool Sixth Form College
2006 - 2008
A Level Grades:
- A Mathematics
- A Computer Science
- A Business Studies
- A General Studies
- C Further Mathematics
AS Level Grades:
- A Critical Thinking
Activities:
- Business Enterprise Competition (team won the overall prize).
- Shares4Schools (trading real shares on the stock exchange).
GCSEs, Cardinal William Allen Catholic High School
2001 - 2006
GCSE Grades:
- A* A* Science (Double Award)
- A* Mathematics
- A* Information & Communication Technology
- A* English Language
- A* Geography
- A* Religious Studies
- A Statistics
- A Electronics
- A English Literature
- A Drama
Activities:
- Student Council Secretary
- EcoSchools
Notable Achievements:
- Gained an A-grade in Statistics one year early.
- Our EcoSchools work acheived the highest award, "Green Flag" status.
- Helped the school to become the UK's first Fairtrade School.
Stack Exchange show all Last seen on Aug 22, 2011
Accounts
Reading show all

The authors of this book were both lecturers within Imperial College's Department of Computing. Jeff Magee became Head of Department whilst Jeff Kramer was a senior Dean. This in no way influences my opinion of this book - which, quite simply, is that it is the best textbook I've ever read! Before reading this book I had no experience of writing concurrent programs or applications, but reading it and working through the exercises provided using the state simulation tool left me with the confidence to write safe concurrent programs - especially in Java.

Brave New Ballot
The Battle to Safeguard Democracy in the Age of Electronic Voting
Aviel David Rubin
This book was incredibly inspiring when undertaking my individual project in my masters' year, which involved implementing a secure online voting system using cryptography to achieve end-to-end verifiability without compromising voter secrecy.
Tools
A Windows PC powered by the original Pentium Processor
Eclipse
