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on May 11, 2011

Markus Olsson

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Currently Web and applications developer at Tickster AB.

About me

I currently spend most of my time with .NET web and applications development. Exclusively C# for the .NET stuff. I'm employed by a small company (~12 employees) that I've been involved with since the start. I work full time on a quite successful web based e-ticket application that I've had the great fortune of designing and building the bulk part of.

My history

I've been developing applications for more years than I care to remember. I started with QBasic at age eleven or twelve continuing onto pascal and then back to basic (VB). After that I "jumped ship" and became an avid linux supporter/developer/evangelist which resulted in quite a lot of bash scripting at first continuing onto C but that was not my cup of tea. I think PHP came next and I started a small consulting business along with some friends called Softdays development to do some web development (hey, everybody was doing it).

After building webshops for a while I found my first programming language love: python and I developed quite a lot of stuff in python before my work situation forced my into a radically new direction.

In the initial stages of planning for our new killer product at work I was introduced to my new colleague who was a real, all-the-way-to-the-bone Microsoft dude. Needless to say we fought like cats and dogs for about a year and there where a lot of hard discussions about how we where going to go about building this system of ours. We eventually settled (against my strongest recommendation) on ASP.NET 2.0 (which was in early beta at the time), C# and SQL Server. I'm really glad we did because C# and .NET (especially with all the new cool features of .net 3.5) really rocks!

Special interests

I'd like to think of myself as a pragmatist with regards to the programming principles and concepts that seem to spawn all over. I cherrypick the stuff that makes sense and throw away the rest. I consider myself a bit of a readability evangelist in the sense that there's few things that give me such satisfaction as reading and writing understandable code.

Performance and scalability are two areas that lie close to my heart. Atleast in part this interest spawned out of necessity trying to make our e-commerce application scale to cope with the, sometimes quite massive, sales peaks that we have to deal with.

Technologies

Experience (4)

Web and applications developer

Tickster AB

September 2004 - Current

Given that up until recently we've been a small company we haven't given ourself titles but If I'd try to assign one to myself It'd probably be lead developer, network administrator and part-time customer support =)

I've been responsible for the development of the bulk part of our system (e-commerce system with more than one million conversions to date) including dealing with co-location, hardware and backup. I've integrated with payment service providers, implemented a credit card fraud prevention system and read the PCI DSS more times than I care to remember.

I've been responsible for small and large development projects both as the only developer, team leader and team participant and I've been first line technical support for our most valued customers.

In short you could say that I've, at least to some extent, have worked with all parts of a large web-based consumer facing application. I've not been directly involved with sales but I've participated as technical aid in several sales-meetings.

Founder

Softdays development

2003 - 2004

While I was still in school I started Softdays development in order for me and two friends of mine to have something to do during the summer. We designed, developed and hosted web sites and applications for local business and organizations. Together with a collegue I developed a php-based framework to aid in rapid development and to fill the gaps in functionality in the (relatively) early versions of php that we used. When the summer was over I continued working part time, mostly doing IT-consulting for local business (network administration, wiring and upgrades).

In charge of IT

The Arvika Festival

2002 - 2004

See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arvika_Festival.

I was responsible for planning and building the network infrastructure for the Arvika Festival. This included various network connections to the media, artists and volunteers.

At the time the Arvika Festival had approximately 2000 volunteers and about 10% of them needed Internet access. Since very few had laptops at the time I was tasked with acquiring around 40 to 50 desktop PCs each year. Most of the computers came from local schools and kind businesses who lent us their hardware.

In less than two weeks the IT-team (lead by me, consisting of 7-10 people) built a temporary network consisting of more than 5km of TP cable, about 30 swiches/hubs and more ugly network tricks than I care to remember. When the festival was over we had a week to tear it all down, clean it up and put it in storage. Ready to be used again the next year.

Co-Founder

Mindwarp 2003

2002 - 2003

At the school where I was studying we had an oppurtunity to do a final project which was to be graded. While the standard project was to study some topic for a couple of weeks and then write a paper on it me and a friend of mine took on a bit more ambitious task.

At the time we where both interested in computers and naturally we had participated in a couple of network gatherings of varying size up to about 80 people. We set out to organize the (at the time) biggest network gathering in our region. We hoped it would be possible to organize a 3-day network gathering for about 600 people. I was responsible for the network wiring, servers and sponsors.

At the end we rented a huge warehouse and made the necessary arrangement to fit 600 people with their computers. We worked with the local power company to ensure that we had sufficient amount of electricity and we got hold of all the electric components necessary for properly distribute the electricity.

As for the network equipment we called all the major networking companies (3Com, Cisco, DLink etc) hoping that they would lend us atleast part of the equipment we needed. In the end all but one company declined. Hewlett Packard saved the day and after a meeting with their Swedish director of marketing they agreed to provide us with whatever network equipment we would need.

I took on the task of planning the network and I brought in friends from all over with more experience than me in order to make it happen. We set up 10 physical servers (we didn't have any fancy pants virtualization back then) that hosted various game servers for all the tournaments that took place during the event.

We did not quite reach our goal of 600 participants but we managed to sell over 350 full access 3-day tickets and more than 200 visitors-tickets (no computer allowed). We had over 30 volunteers working more or less full time for 5 days before and after the event with preparations and cleaning.

At the time this the was (as far as we could tell) the largest school project completed in Sweden and we got quite some interest from regional (we even got a mention in the national media evenening news). When the project was over I was asked to give a presentation of the project to a conference with more than 150 teachers from all over Sweden.

The project started as a fun idea but turned out to be one of my greatest experiences to date giving me the oppurtunity to build an organization from the ground up.

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May 2011


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Generic IBM 286 PC with Monochrome monitor, no mouse and windows 3.0

Vim first, Visual Studio second