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on Aug 24, 2011

Oliver Jones

Currently Senior Mobile Application Developer at Itty Bitty Apps Pty Ltd, and Independent Software Developer.

I am a passionate & quality-oriented software engineer with more than 10 years experience developing software commercially.

Beginning with teaching myself C/C++ as a 15 year old high school student, I have subsequently gone on to obtain a Bachelor of Science in Software Engineering and found my own software development company.

Since moving to Australia in 2005, I have worked in contracting positions within the education and investment finance sectors and in a permanent position as a tools & systems programmer for a Melbourne based video games developer. I am a technology generalist. I have no allegiance to any platform or technology stack. I'm always keen to learn something new and I pride myself on being able to pick up and master that new language, tool, or technical challenge quickly and effectively.

Lately I have been spending most of my time developing desktop and server applications on the Microsoft .NET platform. But in my spare time I've also been endeavouring to stay abreast of developments in the .NET and Ruby web application space and MacOS X and iPhone application development.

I'm most comfortable in relaxed working environments that employ lean/agile development practices and where small tight knit teams of peers derive a lot of enjoyment out of their work and solve difficult problems collaboratively.

I also prefer working on products that the public at large can use, or directly with application users when that software is for in-house use.

It is my objective is to work with the best people possible, not a specific technology. Great teams build great products no matter what tools are in the toolbox.

Technologies

Experience (9)

Senior Mobile Application Developer

Itty Bitty Apps Pty Ltd

April 2011 - Current

Developing and delivering applications on iOS devices to a varied set of clients.

Independent Software Developer

January 2011 - Current

Senior Systems Programmer (Contract)

Goldman Sachs & Partners Australia

November 2008 - December 2010

As a Contract Senior Systems Programmer in the Securities Technology Team at Goldman Sachs & Partners Australia, I worked on client server applications developed using Microsoft’s .NET 3.5 framework.

These N-tier, highly asynchronous applications made up of multiple components running on desktops systems and infrastructure servers. Employing a combination of Windows Forms, Web Services (Java & .NET WCF/ASMX), .Net Remoting (RPC), asynchronous message queues (JMS/SonicMQ) and legacy systems (integrated via COM) to provide a real-time view of algorithmic trading activity to GS&PA equity traders/operators.

In my role working with a team of three other developers I was responsible for much of the technical design and internal architecture of all the .NET desktop and server components that participate in this system.

I conducted a complete internal re-architecture of the desktop trading application in order to increase its capacity for high message throughput, and improve its resiliency with seamless failover/error recovery. The re-architecture also facilitated the establishment of clearer component boundaries, increased code reuse and the adoption of SOLID OO design principles.

Along with the internal behind the scenes changes I also re-factored much of the GUI code in order to use an alternative .NET controls library.

Prior to my joining the team responsible for this system there was almost no use of unit & integration testing tools, code coverage, code analytics, build automation, or continuous integration.

I instituted the use of unit testing & mocking libraries, continuous integration using Hudson, the adoption of StyleCop to enforce coding conventions, and the Resharper refactoring plugin to Visual Studio to increase developer productivity.

In order to reduce the burden placed on testers, speed test iterations, and the time taken to perform production deployments; I used WiX to integrate creation of MSI install packages into the build process and improved these packages to reduced the lengthy server side application install process to a few simple clicks.

Within the Securities IT department more broadly I became a key contributor to the the establishment of automated application build & test processes using and the Hudson Continuous Integration engine. I was also a key contributor to the effort to modernise the toolset used within the Securities IT development team, developing a proposal and executing a project to migrate away from Clearcase to Subversion for centralised source code version control. I also contributed to improving organisational policies around the use of Open Source software & code.

During the last 3 months of my contract with GS&PA I was involved in the analysis and prototyping of an iPhone & iPad application for the company's institutional clients.

Tools Programmer

Transmission Games

September 2006 - September 2008

As a Tools Programmer on the Tools & Infrastructure Team at Transmission Games I developed a number of GUI (.NET Windows Forms) & command line applications and libraries in C# and C/C++.

Working closely with application end-users I developed desktop Windows applications & services that allowed artists and game designers to develop game content.

I developed the majority of the core application user interface components and plugin framework for a content creation and mission design tool. I wrote the core "entity" placement/editing and scene rendering/manipulation infrastructure.

To facilitate the development of this tool I was required to develop the C# to C/C++ managed/native bridge that embedded the native C++ game engine within the managed .NET environment. This was done using a combination of C# P/Invoke wrappers around native C DLLs and CLI/C++ classes providing proxies to native C++ classes.

I also integrated this mission design tool with Perforce - the source code and asset version control system used within the studio - so that content creators did not need to manually manage the versioning of many hundreds of individual asset files.

Using the frameworks and core libraries that I created other developers within the studio were able to create script editing, cinematic, terrain and city scape editing plugins that were hosted within the main content creation application.

I also integrated this application with the game engine's media and dynamic data reloading subsystem that allowed designers and artists to manipulate the game state via the editor in real-time. This system communicated through a Windows Service to the game engine via a custom TCP/IP protocol.

I also developed wholly, or significantly contributed to, a variety of other development support & art asset pipeline tools, build systems, and core game libraries across multiple platforms (PC, Sony PlayStation 3, and Microsoft XBOX 360).

Programmer (Part Time)

Transmission Games

July 2006 - September 2006

I was responsible for developing, deploying & maintaining the studio’s automated build, continuous integration & test system. I did so using a combination of CruiseControl.Net, NAnt, NT batch, Perl & VB scripting. This project also involved writing a complete custom C++ Unit Test framework that would run on Windows, PS3, and XBOX 360 and report results in an XML format compatible with JUnit report processing tools.

The build & integration system was of reasonable complexity and built games and applications composed of a multitude of internal and 3rd party libraries, in a variety of languages across three different target platforms (PC, PlayStation 3, and Microsoft XBOX 360).

Software Developer (Contract)

Faculty of Business and Economics Information Systems Unit, Monash University Caulfield

July 2005 - June 2006

Originally on a 3 month contract, to work on a single PHP/Oracle web application for the Faculty’s intranet, my contract was subsequently extended to a year and I became a significant contributor to the improvement of the ISU’s dev process.

I was the key developer on an internal intranet data acquisition application. The users of this application were academic faculty members.

I inherited this application from a departing employee with little handover. It was a mess of inline PHP and HTML. Huge multi thousand line functions and switch statements.

During my tenure I re-factored much of this application piece by piece into an object oriented system utilising an open source PHP MVC application framework called Phrame. At that time I had taken on maintainer-ship of this open source framework. Phrame was modelled on the Java Struts framework.

At that time AJAX was growing in popularity but there were few mature AJAX toolkits. To improve usability of the application I developed a custom AJAX framework that allowed for many of the dynamic form editing features you see on popular websites today.

To facilitate rapid delivery of new application features I developed an automated web application packaging and deployment system based around Ant that allowed the departmental Linux System Administrators to deploy new versions to test and production environments with nearly zero effort.

I also assisted in the hiring process of additional web developers, ensuring that they met the minimum level of experience and skill in order to successfully continue the work I began. I also contributed, as a speaker, to semi-regular in house training tutorials on existing and emerging web technologies and software dev techniques.

Managing Director, Founder, Software Architect, Senior Developer

Deeper Design Limited

August 1997 - March 2005

Deeper Design specialized in bespoke web and desktop software development using a wide variety of languages and technologies. From PHP, Linux, MySQL and Java to Microsoft Access, C++ & MFC.

Applications were deployed on both Windows & Linux desktops and RedHat Linux servers.

At its peek the company employed 7 full time & contract developers in a variety of roles from Software Engineering and Graphic Design to Quality Assurance.

Architect and Senior Developer I was responsible for developing core web and desktop application frameworks in Perl, PHP & Java. Designing small to medium scale relation databases systems using open source SQL database engines, and the configuration, management and deployment of Linux based server systems. I was also responsible for defining development best practices and ensuring software was delivered bug free to the highest quality standards.

In addition, as is the case with many small businesses proprietors, I had many other roles during the day to day operation of the business. From CEO to Handy Man.

The company was shut down in 2005 when I moved from New Zealand to Australia to explore opportunities in the computer entertainment software field (video games).

Computer Science 2nd Year Student Lab Assistant & Marker (Part Time)

Waikato University, Computer Science Department

March 1997 - November 1997

  • Providing instructional and technical support to University students completing practical lab elements of 2nd year C/C++ programming course.
  • Marking 2nd year University student C/C++ programming assignments.

Computer Science Department 1st Year Student Lab Assistant (Part Time)

Waikato University, Computer Science Department

March 1995 - November 1996

Providing instructional and technical support to University students completing practical lab elements of 1st year introductory computer skills course with Windows 95, Microsoft Office, and Mac OS 7.

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Education

B.S. Computer Science (Software Engineering)

University of Waikato

1994 - 1998

Diploma, Computer Game Development (Programming)

Academy of Interative Entertainment

2006

Stack Exchange Last seen today

Open Source

ittybittybits

Tasty morsels of Objective-C goodness (iOS only)

Apr 2011 - Current; followed by 14 people; forked 4 times


mod_bonjour

Fixes applied to Apple's mod_bonjour.

Jun 2010; followed by 9 people


objectivec-utility

iPhone Utility Code

Oct 2010 - Current; followed by 3 people


IBAForms

A simple iPhone forms library

Apr 2011


display 1 more…

Writing

What’s wrong with this macro?

Personal Blog

What is wrong with this Objective-C (and C/C++) macro?


Cancellable asynchronous searching with UISearchDisplayController

Personal Blog

How deal with cancellable asynchronous searches using UISearchDisplayController.


Reading

StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

The Best Software Writing I

Selected and Introduced by Joel Spolsky

Tools

Atari 800XL

Visual Studio + Resharper, XCode

Background


Background

I grew up in small town New Zealand. I was a geek from an early age.

At the tender age of 10 years my first experience of "programming" was typing out "huge" BASIC programs from old magazines into my Atari 800XL's BASIC interpreter. At the time I didn't know what I was doing. I just wanted to play the games described in the magazine. They sounded great, but they rarely worked. My first "debugging" experience was pouring over long dot matrix print-outs of these programs comparing them line by line with the original magazine source code and correcting my typos.

After years of playing video games on my Atari, Sega and then PC, I decided I wanted to learn how these magical things were made. Being pre-Internet at the time, I had very little access to information about how computer software was made.

I came upon the idea of asking Sierra Online, my favourite games company at the time, for help. I did this by sending many letters and faxes to Sierra customer support. Every time I just got back a standard "thanks for being a fan" form letter.

Undeterred, I tried again and again. Eventually deciding I should address the letter to an actual programmer at Sierra. I found the name of the Lead Programmer from the credits of one of my favourite Sierra games and addressed my letter directly to him. I even stamped it "confidential" in bold red lettering with one of my mum's office stamps.

I got a response! Not from the programmer I had addressed my letter to, but his replacement.

I thank that now forgotten programmer from the bottom of my heart for answering my letter. In his long and detailed response he told me exactly what I needed to know. Learn C/C++ or Pascal.

By reading magazines I went about discovering what these mysterious things were. I learned that I needed a compiler and a book to teach me how to use it.

At 15 years of age I began saving my paper route money as fast as I could so that I could buy Borland C++ 3.1 and the book Mastering Borland C++ by Tom Swan. Even at the academic discount price, it required a whopping $600. Not exactly chump change for a teenager in the early 90's. After months of saving I had my treasure in my hands. Only then did I discover my lowly 286 couldn't run the compiler. Oh the heartbreak.

So after further furious flogging of my cherished video games, consoles, and even my existing 286 I could afford to buy (with more than a little parental help) a brand spanking new 486SX with 4MB of memory and a 512MB Hard Disk. Four thousand dollars down on some flash new gear so I could run my expensive new compiler.

In Tom Swan's gentle care I ventured forth into the uncharted territory that was C++. I've never looked back.