The inorganic app
Clipperhouse
It occurs to me, as I look at my Google+ stream for the first time in two months, the reason I never use it: it never had a chance to grow on me.
Creating applications is a soup-to-nuts proposition. I've never been comfortable with being pigeonholed as a back-end guy or a front-end guy or even a programmer. A programmer needs to be expert (at least 80th percentile) in all of these things. Brilliant architecture * crap usability = crap.
For me, it's about empathy with customers. Smoothness of experience requires every piece to work well and fit right. Technology starts with the end user and moves back from there.
(That said, I am a back-end guy who happens to like user interface.)
Non-stop learning is why I am in technology. I always feel stupid, and I don't mean that in a bad way. The people I admire most seem to have the trait that they feel like they know very little.
I am the developer of the system you are viewing now (Careers 2.0 profiles), including all the open source, Amazon and LinkedIn integration.
I am also the CTO and co-founder of Alikewise, a dating site based on book tastes. A recent pet project is classicalrad.io, an easy way to listen to classical music.
June 2010 - Current
Alongside the amazing team that created Stack Overflow, I develop many aspects of Careers 2.0, the site you are viewing now.
The areas for which I am directly responsible include job listings, profiles such as this one, and integration with third parties such as GitHub and LinkedIn.
I also created our delivery system for advertising Careers job listings on Stack Overflow, Coding Horror and Joel on Software. This system generates each ad dynamically by geocoding and applying a weighted-distribution algorithm, 4 million times a day, and executing in under 20 milliseconds per impression.
January 2009 - Current
Alikewise is a dating site based on book tastes. After having this idea in 2008, a partner and I decided to take on the challenge of creating a startup.
The site launched in early 2010, and currently has over 12,000 user profiles. It has received coverage in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, The Economist, and many other places.
My responsibilities:
July 1999 - November 2008
As Director of Knowledge Sharing, I implemented the Landor’s worldwide intranet (“Landornet”), serving over 800 employees in 22 offices.
Landor created the practice of branding over 60 years ago, and remains at the cutting edge of thought leadership in its industry. However, when I arrived, the firm was struggling to embrace web technologies in its everyday functions.
My first application was a CRM system tailored to Landor’s culture and process. This was followed by a custom Case Histories system, including on-the-fly PDF generation, which is used to demonstrate Landor’s impressive credentials. It serves as the intellectual history of the company.
In 2003, Landornet was awarded by the prestigious Nielsen Norman Group, as one of the 10 best intranets in the world, alongside such organizations as the Mayo Clinic and Chevron. Daily traffic on the site exceeds 12,000 page views, which is very large considering its internal-only audience.
This job was especially pleasurable for me because I had to serve an audience with a strong culture and very high standards for design and usability
1997 - 1999
Founded a second boutique web development firm, serving a variety of clients in publishing, technology, marketing and retail.
1994 - 1997
Co-founder and engineer for boutique web development firm. We were the first (of people we knew!) to use a database for templated publishing. In our case, it was Filemaker and Applescript, then Perl, eventually graduating to early Active Server Pages and Access.
Clients included MacUser magazine and Silicon Graphics.
1988 - 1990
Studied theoretical physics with an emphasis on philosophy, including issues such as epistemology and causation.
1986 - 1988
GitHub, Mar 2013 - Current; followed by 3 people; forked 2 times
A distraction-free, web-based, mobile-friendly directory and player for classical radio stations.
GitHub, Jan 2012 - Current; followed by 12 people
Chrome extension for a slightly better Twitter
A simple tool for exploring the associations between tags on Stack Exchange sites, such as Stack Overflow.
Clipperhouse
It occurs to me, as I look at my Google+ stream for the first time in two months, the reason I never use it: it never had a chance to grow on me.
Clipperhouse
It seems to me the companies with the greatest customer loyalty are those where design has a strong presence in the corporate culture. I don’t mean this in a touchy...
Clipperhouse
There are two kinds of social graphs in the world, explicit and implicit. The explicit ones are the most rare and give their owners disproportionate market values.
Clipperhouse
In recent comments on Hacker News, I suggested, with some snark, that the definition of net neutrality is slippery and ad-hoc, and therefore exploitable. I was promptly…
Commodore 64
Visual Studio, Sublime Text
Testing
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