on Oct 4, 2011
Nick Craver
Winston-Salem, NC, United States
My passion is performance, while fixing a problem why not do it in the most resilient and fastest way possible? Solving a problem is my first love, and code is just a way to do that...solving it while being as correct, extensible and efficient as possible is even better, and how it should always be done. Efficiency is a high bar, one that should never be attainable. Everything can always be faster.
Technologies
c# sql linq-to-sql asp.net jquery jquery-ui html linq javascript css
java vb
Experience (5)
Software Engineer
Stack Exchange
January 2011 - Current
My main activities revolve around the core Q&A engine that drives the Stack Exchange network, including:
- Adding awesome wherever it'll fit
- Constant performance improvements
- Build/maintain the search engine (Lucene.Net)
- Maintain/Improve SQL performance
- Fix all sort of bugs, teaks all sorts of things
- Work with SysAdmins to maintain/improve our infrastructure
- Working 100% remote
The development process here is beyond agile (building production multiple times a day), as is the pace of bugs and features. It's very rare to know what you'll be working on 3 days from now...we add awesome as we come up with it, and quash bugs along the way.
Web Developer
Novella Clinical
2008 - 2010
InfoLink 2
My main role from contractor to current has been the advancement of the InfoLink 2 system, our internally developed CTMS solution. It's a web forms application written in ASP.Net 4.0 on top of an Oracle back-end.
Roles
I am primarily responsible for architecture and coding of the overall project, data and web application layers (with some excellent help from a teammate now). After the 2.2 re-write release to address major performance concerns and a 2.2.1 feature release, 2.3 is re-centered around long-term objectives. My current role is architect for the database to better suit our business needs. The original layout was overly normalized and very inefficient for common tasks, this is being restructured (without data loss) to greatly improve performance and reduce database load...while at the same time simplifying the schema for uses outside of the application (our data goes to a warehouse for consumption as well).
Other responsibilities are all the other peripheral aspects of web applications, CSS, images, controls, efficient HTML, and basically using as much of the browser as we can while supporting IE7+ users.
I am also responsible for source control administration, branch setup and keeping up the continuous integration build process and setting up the configuration of the servers we use (Windows Server 2008 R2, this config is then copied by our System Engineering team to setup QC and Production environments).
Development - InfoLink 2
- 2.0 was based on nHibernate on top of oracle, we had both provider and coding problems contributing to horrible performance but had to complete the initial release (project was 1 year into coding when I was hired).
- 2.1 added many needed features that were either missed or misunderstood in the initial requirements, some hacks put in place to band-aid performance.
- 2.2 The team, now consisting of me, one other developer, and a manager decided to re-write the solution from scratch to address performance the right way, this release focused on performance (most pages load between 5x and 2000x faster compared to 2.1) and improved client validation. This was done by replacing the entire nhibernate data layer with Linq-to-Oracle (which is also much easier to maintain).
- 2.3 (current) This re-write dumps the current reporting solution due to ongoing issues, we'll instead be using a service back-end with our own report solution. Since we're dumping the third-party reports and their model, it also allows us to correct some long-standing database issues by moving a few things around.
Contractor
Robert-Haft Technologies
March 2007 - September 2008
- SQL Server Administrator, responsible for hardware, software, upgrading, and maintaining the data warehouse for Pentair Water Pool & Spa.
- Building SQL based reports via Microsoft Reporting Services and Cognos, ensuring correctness and optimizing for speed.
- Cognos install and administration, same role with SharePoint (2.0/WSS).
- General fire-fighting and on-demand reports or data dumps as systems transitioned.
Contractor
Productivity Point International
February 2007 - March 2007
This was a contractor role to complete a project I started as an intern. I couldn't take the hours I wanted in my final semester and Co-Op at the same time as per their rules, so I left the co-op/intern program and finished the project after being rehired as a contractor.
Roles
- Developed a reporting solution for MyLearning, an internal java/oracle based e-learning application. This was written in C#/ASP.Net 2.0 against and Oracle back-end.
- The general application layout was based on the eForce reporting model, new reports and functionality were added for the myLearning group, as well as performance optimizations since there was a great deal more data (about 10:1) compared to what the previous solution was designed to handle/display.
Co-Op/Software Developer
GlaxoSmithKline
April 2005 - January 2007
During this period I was a Co-Op from NC State University working for the CSSD Department at GSK.
eForce
- Main responsibility was development of eForce and eForce Reports. The eForce reporting application was originally written by others, my responsibility was updating it for eForce changes/enhancements and adding new reports, mostly helping out Jarrod Dixon in that capacity.
- eForce was a server-side java/oracle based application written by Docent and customized internally at GSK. Jarrod and I did most of the enhancements/bug fixes during my time on the project.
BrandSampleToolKit
- Another high impact project was BrandSampleToolkit, the first application we got to develop in ASP.Net 2.0. The purpose here was to collect all available data related to samples and display that to brand managers to better make production and distribution decisions. One team worked on the data side collecting all the data into a single warehouse ("spider"), while another (Jarrod and I for coders) did the .Net side of things. Most of my responsibilities were controls and SQL optimization in this project.
Other
- Our group was also responsible for creating a fair number of small websites/gadgets for other departments. These ranged from simple gadgets that got displayed on the portal to full blown websites in ASP.Net.
Education
Computer Science
North Carolina State University
2003 - 2007
The only accomplishment to note was a Co-Op with GlaxoSmithKline for 3 years developing C#/VB ASP.Net and client .Net applications.
School itself wasn't very useful, the curriculum was very dated, about 6 years behind still teaching very basic structures at the senior level. These were part of every framework even at that time. While I agree it's important to know how they work, never moving past this at 400 level classes wasn't very educational and I learned mostly outside the classroom reading blogs and programming at GSK.
Stack Exchange Last seen yesterday
Open Source
mvc-mini-profiler
A simple but effective Mini-Profiler for ASP.NET, WCF
followed by 458 people; forked 50 times
dotless
.NET Port of the ruby Less CSS lib
Feb 2011
This is the Stack Overflow branch of the dotless compiler with tweaks and enhancements mainly around an integrated build environment.
Reading
Tools
Gateway 33Mhz, 4MB RAM, 512MB HD
Visual Studio
Background
I feel I got a much better education in 4 weeks writing code with programmers more experienced and knowledgeable than 4 years in college.
I feel that I've learned most by reading and doing, but overall it's such a small portion of what's out there. I still consider myself a student and continue to learn new tricks, shortcuts, or just something entirely new almost daily.


