User Mode Memory Page Allocation: A Silver Bullet For Memory Allocation?
Abstract: This paper proposes a novel solution: the elimination of paged virtual memory and partial outsourcing of memory page allocation and manipulation from the…
I have over fifteen years of computer software engineering experience across multiple projects, from large to small, from defence to health care. I have acted as Chief Software Architect and Expert Consultant as well as Team Member. Unusually for a Software Engineer, I hold an additional undergraduate degree in Economics and Management, giving me a uniquely deep perspective on generating Business Value.
I serve on various international engineering standardisation committees, including ISO/IEC JTC1/SC22 (Programming languages, their environments and system software interfaces) and JTC1/SC38 (Distributed application platforms and services). I am currently the JTC1/SC22 convenor for the Republic of Ireland.
You can find my full CV, with optional kitchen sink detail and optional customisation, at http://www.nedprod.com/xmlcv/
October 2012 - Current
Forthcoming when I begin the position.
October 2011 - September 2012
Appointed to the National Standards Authority of Ireland (NSAI) ISO/IEC JTC1/SC22 (Programming languages, their environments and system software interfaces) and JTC1/SC38 (Distributed application platforms and services) mirror committees. Appointed Irish convenor of JTC1/SC22. Joined Austin Common Standards Revision Group responsible for development of POSIX.
June 2011 - Current
Advising on social networking, teleconferencing, other assorted odds and ends. Managing the LinkedIn, Facebook et al social networking front ends for the WEA.
July 2009 - Current
We specialise in the general optimisation of systems supplying advice on and solutions involving the use of technology to improve business efficiency. We supply everyone from businesses local to Cork as well as large multinational corporations which span the globe.
March 2011 - September 2011
Luxubrations Οξυδέρκεα (Luxubrations Oxydérkeia) was a startup project aimed at bringing deep, penetrating insight (oxyderkis) to academic studies performed under artificial light (luxubrations). Originally intended as a Master of Research thesis project with the Institute of Education in the University of London, this software performed real-time cloud and client analysis of how students went about writing academic work outputs. Unfortunately due to the loss of access to students with which to test the software, it had to be abandoned after six months of development.
Some unusual and interesting technologies were employed during the development of this project. The Microsoft Office plugin was written in C# utilising .NET 3.5/2.0. The web browser extensions (for Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox, Opera and Google Chrome) were written in Javascript and jQuery using the Crossrider cross-browser extension framework. Both the web browser extensions and the Microsoft Office plugin used JSON-RPC v2 to communicate with a multithreaded client-local server written in Python which stored all the data as reduced OpenXML or sanitised XHTML in a NoSQL XML database called BaseX. The Latent Semantic Analysis (LSA) and Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA) was performed using the Gensim python library. Access to Google Cloud Storage and Amazon S3 was performed using the Boto python library. It was intended to use Google App Engine to perform the cloud execution portion of the project, but unfortunately the project had to be abandoned before implementation of this portion could be begun.
January 2011 - April 2011
Gave sixty hours of lectures in Business and Management to undergraduate students from l’Ecole Supérieure de Commerce IDRAC Lyon, France as part of their semester abroad studying in a native English speaking country.
Topics taught were: (i) International Business (ii) International Law (iii) Advertising, Marketing, Banking, Finance (iv) The European Union. Each of these was delivered via a critical approach making particular use of annotated contemporary articles from the business press and audio-visual techniques to overcome the lack of native English barrier to comprehension.
A particularly interesting component of the curriculum delivered during this course was a component of critical thinking Business skills based on Springer, C.W. and Borthick, A.F., (2004), 'Business Simulation to Stage Critical Thinking in Introductory Accounting: Rationale, Design, and Implementation', Issues in Accounting Education, vol. 19 no. 3, pp. 277-303. During action research performed during the teaching of the course, I determined that the students would prefer a more practical business task solving approach to their group work activities. On searching the literature, I found the above paper which presents a seven-stage assignment plan from which I derived a very similar plan.
July 2009 - April 2010
We facilitate the enabling of growth via the publication of materials, holding of conferences and the establishment of dialogue between those in a position to initiate change.
October 2008 - June 2009
For our final group project, my team won the prestigious 2009 Student Enterprise Awards held annually by Enterprise Ireland, the Irish Government organisation for entrepreneurship, for our Web 2.0 FIXatdl Financial Algorithmic Trading Definition Language Editor.
September 2008 - May 2009
Tutored the XHTML, Javascript and PHP programming modules of the Masters in E-Business
September 2008 - May 2009
Tutored the “Masters in E-Business” class of 2009 in XHTML, Javascript and PHP web services programming. Also tutored students suffering from disabilities in Economics, Business Studies, Statistics, IT and Management.
September 2008 - February 2009
Gave twenty-one hours of Economics lectures for the Adult Education Department in their interdisciplinary Social Studies degree programme, during which I achieved an excellent 87.2% class attendance, an 82.8% Interestingness and an 81.2% Clearness rating in the weekly feedback form evaluations.
Designed the syllabus of the course to dovetail in with the other modules taught in the Degree. Coursework consisted of five readings from five topical books with a series of questions which were marked each week.
Topics covered include non-linear chaotic dynamic systems, information asymmetries, energy return on investment (EROI), volatility and periodicity in economic growth, the disequilibrium structures within demand and supply, the sources of the Celtic Tiger, the Gaussian distribution and the central limit theorem, correlation and convertibility of energy, food and water.
October 2004 - June 2008
This was a double major in Economics and Management and therefore had no programming content. I did perform Econometrics (the statistical study of economic behaviour) and my Masters dissertation topic was on "Modelling the Costs of Climate Change and its Costs of Mitigation".
May 2002 - June 2006
My third and fourth attempts at reimplementing computer software structure from the ground-up, with the primary goal of creating a 10x or greater productivity improvement for skilled workers (Brookes’ Silver Bullet). Implemented in C++ & Python using TnFOX (previously Qt) and multithreading throughout, it is designed for 64 bit NUMA architectures and can run on Win32/64, POSIX Unix (e.g. Linux, FreeBSD) and Mac OS X but with low resource requirements for eventual transition to mobile phones.
The major sub-goals of this project include:
To make software self-organising and self-optimising based upon system (ecosystem) and complexity theory (c.f. Bateson, Heisenburg, Prigogine) whereby tools magnify the effectiveness of effort.
To conceptualise all programming and user operation in simple cognitive elements, thus greatly improving intuitiveness of operation and much increased productivity.
To integrate all software components across multiple systems such that they appear and act as one.
To be fully secure at all levels whilst remaining compatible with the host OS – this is a full capability based system.
January 2001 - May 2002
Designed a multithreaded distributed application for Windows 2000 using the Microsoft technologies Visual C++, VisualBasic, VBA, MFC and C#; MySQL & ODBC for the database and the National Instruments’ technologies PXI, LabWindows/CVI, TestStand and LabView. Also designed and implemented a system restore CD-ROM which was a bootable version of Linux with custom-written software. The project’s goal was to be a bench-portable test bench control and component management software plus bench-customisations for the (i) M-3011 Hydraulic Test Bench Bench (contracted by EADS Deutschland) and (ii) B-1057 Fuel Component Test Bench (contracted by British Aerospace Systems) for the EuroFighter project.
Innovative features included:
A self-adapting help system which taught the user as they used the bench. This was written in HTML with custom embedded ActiveX controls (MS HTMLHelp).
A graphical virtual instrument showing fuel flows, valve positions etc. which were manipulable using the mouse. This was implemented using a custom designed scripting language to specify possible fuel flows and possible valve states.
A searchable library of all engineering specifications in multiple formats including SGML, PDF and MS Word.
A completely customisable UUT test report generator (using Crystal Reports) which each air force could tailor individually.
The application could run on two computers connected by TCP/IP at the same time controlling the same bench.
Performance analysis at the end of project using tools designed by myself showed 5000 i/o's per second sustained (well above specification).
Other responsibilities I assumed there included liasing extensively with EADS, BAE and directly with the militaries of the four EuroFighter participating nations.
October 1997 - June 2000
My final project for this degree was a technically superior Hardware Abstraction Layer (HAL) called NedHAL for generic ARM architectures in ARM assembler and ANSI C. It was an object orientated modular framework with multiprocessor capability. Also ported the uC/OS II RTOS onto my project (now freeware). Some of this code has been since incorporated into the primary car operating system firmware Micrium which is used by many major car manufacturers.
June 1999 - August 1999
This three month contract was to implement a specified list of items, most important of which was to improve performance. This was especially successful with a threefold performance increase and a six figure cost saving thanks to not having to prematurely upgrade hardware.
Replaced the real-time operating system (RTOS) in their GPS (Global Positioning System) library for their embedded ARM device with a licensed third-party RTOS called SuperTask! (made by US Software).
Implemented and integrated many new features including Flash ROM reprogramming, serial port driver, LCD panel display driver, power saving and Infra-Red communications.
Merged ARM's Demon debugger into the new operating system, allowing debugging without a JTAG and ICE (In-Circuit Emulator) based debugger.
June 1998 - September 1998
Summer Job performing a number of "odd jobs" involving the writing of several small computer programs in C and ARM Assembler.
Wrote a driver for ARM’s Angel debugger to drive a tertiary serial port on the Cirrus Logic CLPS-7111 board. Due to hardware difficulties, successfully used a logic analyser to implement the code.
Wrote a modular EEPROM programmer in C++ for Win32 allowing test ROM images to be easily flashed into test boards.
Overhauled and redesigned DEC's StrongARM uHAL for generic Arm's and ported the new uHAL to the Arm test motherboard, the PID7T. Also ported the redesigned uHAL to the Cirrus Logic CL-7111 board.
2011 - 2013
Always had studied applied mathematics throughout my education, and had felt a gap in my pure mathematical knowledge. So thought I ought to fix that :)
2010 - 2012
2008 - 2009
Won the prestigious 2009 Student Enterprise Awards held annually by Enterprise Ireland, the Irish Government organisation for entrepreneurship, for our Web 2.0 FIXatdl Financial Algorithmic Trading Definition Language Editor group project.
2004 - 2008
Senior Committee of Andrew Melville Hall Resident's Committee, President of the Future Society, Member of the Economics Society
1997 - 2000
Elected as member of the last Lawns Residents Association, Elected as Staff/Student Representative for the Computer Science Department, Elected to Students' Union Parliament as Representative, Elected as the Undergraduate Science Faculty Representative on University Senate
Final project: Designed and implemented a technically superior Hardware Abstraction Layer (HAL) called NedHAL for generic ARM architectures in ARM assembler and ANSI C. It was an object orientated modular framework with multiprocessor capability. Also ported the uC/OS II RTOS onto my project (now freeware). Some of this code has been since incorporated into the primary car operating system firmware Micrium which is used by many major car manufacturers.
1990 - 1996
Motorola Software in Schools Competition 1993, Aer Lingus Young Scientist's Competition 1994
SourceForge
A portable in-place bitwise binary Fredkin trie algorithm which allows for near constant time insertions, deletions, finds, closest fit finds and iteration. Is approx. 50-100% faster than red-black trees and up to 20% faster than O(1) hash tables.
Repackaged work done as part of implementing the user mode page allocator for nedmalloc (see last experience) into a standalone C and C++ architecture independent library called nedtries. This library implements an in-place bitwise Fredkin trie algorithm which allows for near constant time insertions, deletions, finds, closest fit finds and iteration as well as being of equal speed in each of these operations (a very unusual characteristic in search algorithms). Benchmarking shows it to be approximately 50-100% faster than red-black trees and up to 20% faster than O(1) hash tables. Also added a C++ STL std::map and std::unordered_map compatible container called nedtries::trie_map which allows very easy usage from C++. Full API and source documentation is provided as a Microsoft Compiled Help format file.
SourceForge
A modern secure, robust, multithreaded, exception aware, internationalisable, portable GUI toolkit library designed for mission-critical work in C++ and Python forked from the FOX library. Replicates the Qt API in many places.
Forked the FOX GUI toolkit, and personally added about 40,000 extra lines of C++ implementing lots of very useful stuff. Unlike most portability or GUI toolkits, the stuff I added is really fast and uses barely a touch of memory.
SourceForge
An EXTREMELY FAST portable thread caching malloc implementation written in C for multiple threads without lock contention based on dlmalloc. Optimised for x86 and x64. Compatible with C++. Can patch itself into existing binaries on Windows.
ptmalloc2 wasn't fast enough, so I took dlmalloc and bolted on a threadcache. Turns out it screamed past other much more complex allocators such as Hoard. Less code = faster execution, even if it is rather kludgey.
SourceForge
Brook is an ANSI C like general purpose stream programming language and is designed to incorporate the ideas of data parallel computing and arithmetic intensity into a familiar, efficient language. Has OpenMP CPU, OpenGL, DirectX 9 and AMD CTM backends.
Significantly upgraded the open source software Brook GPU which is a streaming computation language for graphics processors. A 2007 era GPU can achieve 250 GFLOPs with good data partitioning, and performance roughly doubles annually.
Upgraded the OpenGL runtime to use FBOs instead of PBuffers and updated the texture transfer to use PBO-based asynchronous DMA transfers, thus significantly increasing speed and adding full compatibility with Linux and Mac OS X.
Added a GLSL output runtime target, thus matching the OpenGL capabilities with the DirectX runtime.
Added per-thread operation to all runtimes, thus allowing multiple GPU’s to be operated in parallel simultaneously.
Upgraded the CPU debug runtime to use SSE intrinsics on x86 and x64 processors and OpenMP to use multiple processors. Performance was increased some forty times.
SourceForge
One of the fastest & best dynamic memory allocators known, forked directly from GNU glibc v2.3.3 but with Windows support patched in. NOTE: nedmalloc supersedes ptmalloc2 and this project will no longer be maintained!
Forked it, added Win32 support and did lots of optimising.
SourceForge
Generic ACPI CPU Throttling driver for Apple MacOS X on Intel and AMD processors
Was annoyed by the fan constantly going on my AMD laptop, so wrote a kernel driver for Mac OS X which operated Cool and Quiet. Turned out it was really popular.
GitHub, Jul 2011 - Feb 2013; followed by 7 people
TortoiseXXX plugin for the Bugs Everywhere distributed issue tracker
Bugs Everywhere is not a bad distributed bug tracker, however me personally I like GUIs. I particularly like TortoiseGIT and I wanted BE to integrate with that, so I went ahead and put together my first brand new C# and .NET app in many years. Solves the problem nicely.
GitHub, Nov 2011
Implements a plugin which scans uploaded documents for viruses
The World Economics Association contracted me to develop a ClamAV virus scanning plugin for journal articles submitted to their journals. Was not much fun developing this - the PKP's plugin system was not designed by someone experienced in such things, so old GNU patch is sadly required to get the hooks into the right places. Still, got there in the end.
GitHub, Jul 2011; followed by 2 people
A Python JSON-RPC over HTTP that mirrors xmlrpclib syntax.
Forked jsonrpclib, adding in a Javascript implementation of JSON-RPC v2.
GitHub, Jul 2010 - Dec 2011
An Interactive Live XML based Curriculum Vitae with XHTML output
I used to keep my CV in a Word file, but it got very awkward keeping it up to date and customising it for particular job applications. I eventually got annoyed enough to implement a full XML based CV/Resume system with XHTML XSLTs in both short and long formats. Outputs in hResume and HTML5 microdata markup, so it imports into LinkedIn et al. This has been a real time saver.
GitHub, Feb 2012 - Jul 2012; followed by 2 people
Bugs Everywhere is a “distributed bugtracker” designed to complement distributed revision control systems
Forked BE in order to substantially improve Windows support, not just fixing bugs on Windows but also adding decent packaging and standalone support so a separate Python runtime is no longer necessary. This project is used by BEurtle.
GitHub, Jun 2010 - Dec 2010; followed by 16 people; forked 5 times
An E-Commerce solution for Plone supporting a shopping basket, stock quantities, differing delivery and taxation rules based on criteria, product variants and Paypal payment processing
When searching for an e-Commerce solution for the ned Productions Ltd. website capable of handling intra-EU B2B and B2C VAT, it was realised that very few open source e-Commerce solutions are capable of this without purchasing additional components (and usually at a high monthly cost). As the company's primary web application platform is Plone, a complete configurable intra-EU VAT solution was developed and contributed to Easyshop.
GitHub, Jun 2010 - Nov 2012; followed by 121 people; forked 2 times
A portable in-place bitwise binary Fredkin trie algorithm which allows for near constant time insertions, deletions, finds, closest fit finds and iteration. Is approx. 50-100% faster than red-black trees and up to 20% faster than O(1) hash tables.
GitHub, Jun 2010 - Mar 2013; followed by 72 people; forked 14 times
An EXTREMELY FAST portable thread caching malloc implementation written in C for multiple threads without lock contention based on dlmalloc. Optimised for x86 and x64. Compatible with C++. Can patch itself into existing binaries on Windows.
GitHub, Mar 2012 - Feb 2013; followed by 2 people; forked 2 times
Solves the problem of forgetting to keep __init__.py files up to date
GitHub, Mar 2012 - Jul 2012; followed by 2 people
Provides fast, lazy, RESTful fastcgi access to various issue (bug) trackers. Compilable into a fast binary with IronPython and PyPy for even faster access.
GitHub, Oct 2010 - Aug 2012
Reference Implementations for my ISO and POSIX standards change proposals
Endgame Framework (EF) is an M&S architecture that provides: Functionality common across Vulnerability/Lethality (V/L) domains * An API that links customized behavior with the core behaviors * A graphics engine powered by GEOMIS. * EF has been used successfully in incorporation of legacy V/L methodology and in development of new V/L methodologies.
Contracted by ARA to help them solve performance problems being experienced by one of their major projects for the US Department of Defence, a planning solver application which constructs large trees of interrelated objects occupying multiple gigabytes of RAM. Work focused around the incorporation of my memory allocator, nedmalloc, into their project.
Determined that the source of their problems was that nedmalloc was not being reliably called by their Qt-based application (a violation of the ODR) which was causing segmentation faults. Many solutions were analysed, and eventually a brute force approach of adding a binary patcher was adopted which had the major long term cost advantage of not requiring a custom build of Qt. This binary patcher replaced all usage of the system allocator with usage of nedmalloc by rewriting the appropriate parts of the PE format binaries on Windows.
One particular problem was handling system allocated blocks efficiently as the logic for checking for such blocks is highly branch predictor unfriendly. An initial 13% loss in performance on x86 was reduced to nil through considerable hand tuning and analysis of assembler.
The GNU Compiler Collection includes front ends for C, C++, Objective-C, Fortran, Java, Ada, and Go, as well as libraries for these languages (libstdc++, libgcj,...). GCC was…
I added the new symbol visibility support in the v4.0 release (-fvisibility=hidden et al).
Boost provides free peer-reviewed portable C++ source libraries.
I added void * support to Boost.Python

Convenient Theories, Distorted Facts, Ample Rewards
Norbert Häring, Niall Douglas
Abstract: This paper proposes a novel solution: the elimination of paged virtual memory and partial outsourcing of memory page allocation and manipulation from the…
Abstract: It is often said that one of the biggest limitations on computer performance is memory bandwidth (i.e."the memory wall problem"). In this position paper, I…
IDEAS: Economics and Finance Research
A thorough review is made of Climate Change Science, going into much greater detail than is typical of papers in Economics and specifically emphasising the…

An Exploration of the Parallels between Modern Physics and Eastern Mysticism
Fritjof Capra

Collected Essays in Anthropology, Psychiatry, Evolution, and Epistemology
Gregory Bateson

Rita L. Atkinson, Richard C. Atkinson, Edward E. Smith, Daryl J. Bem, Susan…
Acorn Electron
GNU nano, Kate, Visual Studio and Notepad++