on Apr 12
Massimo Iacolare
Florence, Italy
I'm a developer with 13 years of experience and a passion for "software development done right (tm)". Which means that I've spent a lot of time trying to understand and apply object oriented design and related principles (I don't always succed but at least I can tell the difference :-).
I've designed and developed applications for the desktop and the web (both sides: on the backend trying to keep a sane structure while responding to customers needs and on the frontend trying to figure out how to organize an ever growing js/css codebase).
During my career I've been doing my fair share of trials and errors looking for a viable approach to programming and I'll happily share my findings if you think I fit your company.
My current toolbelt includes:
.NET 2.0/3.5/4.0, C# only (quite used to LINQ, know a bit of functional programming)
ASP.NET MVC & Webforms (don't like Webforms but we all have legacy code somewhere, right?)
Front-end dev (Plain Javascript, jQuery, Backbone & CSS) (the more I use them, the more I like them)
Sql Server 2005/2008 (although I'm not a DBA)
NHibernate (love it), IoC (like it)
Subversion, Git
Just a glance at Powershell and Python
My tweets twitter.com/iacoware
Technologies
c# asp.net-mvc nhibernate sql-server jquery subversion git
vb6 vb.net
Experience (6)
tech lead (employee)
QNT
2011 - Current
http://www.qnt.it
We are a small team, so I usually wear several hats.
As a "tech lead" I help shaping the company's technical choices. I build stuff for our flagship product, a booking engine and I try new tools and techniques from which the whole team could benefit.
I do my best to move the company forward, both from a technical and cultural viewpoint.
Stuff I worked on:
- Designed & implemented from scratch a new version of the online booking module as a SPA using Backbone & jQuery. Vastly improved UX.
See www.simplebooking.it/ibe/hotelbooking/search?hid=209&lang=en Worked on performance improvements on both the backend (tuning our booking engine) and the frontend (usual WPO stuff)
Developed a mobile web application (using jQTouch) to provide a mobile presence to our customers. See artemide.hotelmobilesite.com
...lots of other improvements on coding & infrastructure focused on reducing friction to help us going faster :-)
tech lead (consultant)
QNT
November 2009 - December 2010
http://www.qnt.it
I've been responsible for rewriting the core engine of the booking application with NHibernate (it was previously written using stored proc).
In the meantime I introduced Subversion and set up a build server using TeamCity and PSake to get a Build and Continuos Integration on various company's products.
I also developed a Facebook application (had a lot of fun with FBML & FBJS)
web developer (consultant)
Il Tiglio
September 2008 - December 2009
http://www.iltigliosrl.it
I helped develop a web application for the management of generic database tables using as a source for structure metadata other tables in the db.
In this project I worked on most of the dynamic generation of web form and controls (DevExpress) using the data access layer already in use.
I have also contributed to a proper use of Subversion and a frictionless workflow.
tech lead (consultant)
Eldes
September 2007 - June 2008
http://www.eldes.it
I started developing a web application for scheduling maintenance of industrial machinery, which was the counterpart of an existing Windows applications using the database as an integration point.
I implemented a domain model and used NHibernate for data access. I am also able to introduce the use of Subversion as a tool for source control.
consultant
Open Lab
March 2006 - October 2006
http://www.open-lab.com
Open Lab is a company formed by highly skilled people who develop products and online services in Java. We've been friends for a long time and in constant contact for mutual growth, identifying future trends and development of web applications while not sharing the server-side language.
For them I have also maintained a desktop application developed in C#
Team Leader
Gruppo Abaco
1997 - 2005
http://www.gruppoabaco.it
I have been developing Windows applications using the .NET Framework and PowerBuilder. Specifically I worked on design and development of accounting software related to construction industry.
As a Team Leader I did R&D and updating the skills of my team members.
Education
High school (58/60)
I.T.C. Alessandro Volta
1998 - 2003
Stack Exchange Last seen 3 days ago
Stack Exchange Accounts
Open Source
Apps & Software
Climbervoice
It's a web application dedicated to rock climbing where you can find informations about crags around the world. All the content is contributed by users.
Did the whole thing :-)
It's my pet project which links together two of my passions, climbing & programming
Reading
Design Patterns
Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented SoftwareErich Gamma, Richard Helm, Ralph Johnson, John M. Vlissides
Joel on Software
And on Diverse and Occasionally Related Matters That Will Prove of Interest to…Joel Spolsky
Tools
Visual Studio + R#
Background
On March 2010 I was a speaker at the meeting Developers in Florence where I talked about the functional features of C#
I've developed ClimberVoice, a collaborative website where climbers can contribute to an archive of climbing crags.
I've loooove open source and used many OSS projects (and learned a lot from them):
ASP.NET MVC, NHibernate, Lucene.NET, Castle Windsor, Automapper, jQuery, a lot more...
Plus some public web services:
Google Maps, Amazon S3
Who am I?
A nice guy, open minded and pragmatic. I like to think I'm competent at my job so I'm the kind of person who likes to debate, discuss and sometimes challenge the "status quo" rather than doing my job without questioning.
I'm a fan of OO design, architectures, etc. and that's why I usually like to learn about the general principles behind a framework/technology.
My usual strategy to solve a problem is to find its root cause (5 whys) followed by research and analysis from different angles. I like to sharpen my tools before attacking ;). It's 80% analysis and 20% coding. There's already enough bad code out there and I'd like to keep my karma balanced ;).
Moreover most of the time we face a problem already solved by someone else, understanding it may save us from common pitfalls.
I hate duplicated code and I think the third time you repeat the same task it should be automated. Reducing waste (of time, energy, brain cycles) is a goal and a way to regain efficency.
I've been working on different codebases and seen how much one in bad shape affects the ease of adding a feature which lead to slow progress (which is a problem given the speed of competitors). Thus I've become addicted to "code quality" defined as the velocity at which you can add/modify a functionality. Better means faster ;)
I do a lot of R&D and my primary source of learning are books (I like reading), blogs, twitter and sometimes conferences. The arguments vary a lot from development, to web design, to marketing, to processes, to people.
Over time I've learned that software development isn't solely about languages, compilers and data structures. I saw how people instead of processes/tools/whatever are the real key factor and how they get better results when they are surrounded by a positive and creative environment. It's like running with a tailwind :)
What company am I looking for?
I'd like to find one which:
Empowers his collaborators by supporting personal initiative rather than hinder it with micromanagement.
Positive, creative (possibly beautiful) environment led by an identity management style.
Populated by smart people (It's the best proof that is worth working with you and more appealing than money).
Actively support knowledge sharing.
I've worked from remote full time for six years. If your company consider telecommute as an option (even for few days a week) it would be a plus.
I usually prefer to spend my time thinking rather than waiting the compiler. A fast workstation with multi-monitors is a must.









