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on Oct 16, 2011

Roger Deetz

Indianapolis, IN, United States

www.mooville.com

Currently Senior Software Architect at Vision Solutions.

I'm a software designer and developer (some might even say "architect"). I started my career at InstallShield, where I was involved in designing and building one of the first development tools for Windows Installer.

My interests and passion lie with user experience and interaction design. I dabble in the graphic arts, though I'm not an expert.

The first program I ever wrote was in GW-BASIC. Once I got to college and learned that you could use Visual Basic 3.0 to write a Windows program, I never looked back. After toiling in the COM world with ATL for a while, I fell in love with programming all over again when C# was introduced. Now I'm working with HTML5, CSS, and JavaScript, and I've found it amazing what you can do.

I do my best to balance design sense, technical skill, and getting-things-done. Even years after making software my "day job", I still love to make things that look great, work well, solve a problem, and are a joy to build.

Technologies

Experience (8)

Senior Software Architect

Vision Solutions

August 2010 - Current

Director of user interface design and research for the Double-Take product line. Responsible for ensuring consistent and high-quality UIs for all products, as well as fostering UI development best practices. Participated in charting company and product strategy, particularly from a software architecture and visual design perspective. Worked with upper management, customers, developers, and project managers to define a desirable yet practical design for the company's products.

Software Architect

Double-Take Software

March 2007 - September 2010

Director of user interface design and research for the entire product line. Responsible for ensuring consistent and high-quality UIs for all products, as well as fostering UI development best practices. Participated in charting company and product strategy, particularly from a visual design perspective. Organized a company-wide effort to unify a number of separate management consoles into a single unified console.

Client Team Manager

Double-Take Software (formerly NSI Software)

September 2006 - March 2007

Managed a team responsible for all design and development of the user interfaces to the company's products. Leader of the interaction and visual design for the entire product line. In addition to managing the team, participated in tuning the HTML, CSS, and JavaScript that drove the user interface. Create the artwork for the UI and also drafted the overall user experience direction. Conducted performance reviews and led the hiring and firing policies for the team.

Software Designer

NSI Software

February 2005 - September 2006

Designed user interfaces for all products across the product line. Used a combination of Photoshop, Visio, and PowerPoint to illustrate the desired interaction model for features. It was challenging to provide design guidance without any development responsibility. However, I developed a good rapport with the development team, and we were able to affect important change in the product. It was particularly satisfying to come into a new company with a new system and be able to dive right in and start getting things done.

Senior Software Developer

NoInk

April 2004 - February 2005

Designed and implemented a custom medical device registration form for the Pocket PC form factor. Customized Pocket PC-based sales force automation applications by working with clients to gather requirements, author detailed design documentation, and implement the customizations. Designed and developed a server-side data integration system using Java. The system determines the differences between two tables in a relational database, and then applies the changes from one table to another.

Architect, Visual Product Design

InstallShield

July 2002 - April 2004

Guided the visual and user interaction design of the entire InstallShield product line. Educated development teams in solving user interface problems, and helped develop and communicate the company’s vision for user experiences. Authored the InstallShield Visual Guidelines, which defined company-wide standards for user interaction and visual design. Researched and prototyped new user experience concepts and technologies, and served as a facilitator for bringing those concepts into production software. Administrator and primary developer for a departmental Web server running Windows 2000. Implemented intranet applications using ASP, ADO, and .NET technologies.

Senior User Interface Designer and Developer

InstallShield

July 2000 - July 2002

Made key contributions to the visual design and product strategy of DigitalWizard, a consumer-focused download and digital media manager. Lead the user interface technical design and development for DigitalWizard. Architected a dynamic engine for rendering the DigitalWizard user interface, built from ATL-based COM objects and advanced HTML, CSS, and JScript. Mentored new team members as the initial group was expanded.

User Interface Developer

InstallShield

June 1998 - July 2000

Responsible for technical design and implementation of features for InstallShield for Windows Installer 1.0 (ISWI), a development environment for authoring Windows Installer-based setups. Contributed to user interaction design of new features for ISWI. Implemented user interface components using Visual Basic 6, HTML, CSS, VBScript, and C++. Debugged difficult performance problems layered through the web browser, script layer, and COM layers.

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Education

BS Business, concentration in Information Systems

Indiana University - Kelley School of Business

1994 - 1998

Member of the Business Honors Program; Vice President of Technology for the Computer Information Systems Club

Stack Exchange Last seen 6 days ago

Open Source

QUno

An Uno-like card game implemented with WPF.

Aug 2008 - Current

I am the coordinator of the project, and currently the sole designer and developer.


Reading

Books

StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

The Old New Thing

Practical Development Throughout the Evolution of Windows

Raymond Chen

That Windows is beautiful, terrible, ugly and awesome all the same time. And that Microsoft deserves a lot more credit than it gets for maintaining backward compatibility.


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

Making Things Happen

Mastering Project Management

Scott Berkun

That project management isn't really that hard, if you can actually get good people to work together. Which is far easier said than done.


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

Joel on Software

And on Diverse and Occasionally Related Matters That Will Prove of Interest to…

Joel Spolsky

That I want to run a company the way Joel runs FogCreek.


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

The Best Software Writing I

Selected and Introduced by Joel Spolsky

That there are some really good writers in the software world.


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

Programming WPF

Chris Sells, Ian Griffiths

I really grokked WPF after reading this book. I understood the spirit and the architecture in a way I never could have from a series of MSDN articles.


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

Windows Presentation Foundation Unleashed

Adam Nathan

That WPF is a pretty phenomenal platform. Too bad the tooling the dark corners of it we're ready for prime time when it was released.


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

About Face 3

The Essentials of Interaction Design

Alan Cooper, Robert Reimann, David Cronin

I don't really remember learning much from this book.


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

The Inmates Are Running the Asylum

Why High Tech Products Drive Us Crazy and How to Restore the Sanity

Alan Cooper

That I'm not the only one who feels this way about the state of the software design. Also, anything + computer = computer. Always.


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

Code Complete

A Practical Handbook of Software Construction

Steve McConnell

That somebody could write a book about very fine-grained details of programming, and it would actually be an enjoyable read.


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

Code

The Hidden Language of Computer Hardware and Software

Charles Petzold

That the evolution of computer programming isn't really magic. It actually has a pretty logical path of development.


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

The Humane Interface

New Directions for Designing Interactive Systems

Jef Raskin

That we should have been applying these fundamental aspects of interface design for years.


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

Programming Windows®, Fifth Edition

Charles Petzold

That Windows programming used to be a lot harder than it is today.


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

Inside Com

Dale Rogerson

That COM is a technology that I could grudingly respect. An essential evil, if you will.


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

Inside C#, Second Edition

Tom Archer, Andrew Whitechapel

That C# is a language that I could love.


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

Expert F#

Don Syme, Adam Granicz, Antonio Cisternino

That functional programming can be pretty mind-bending, but is very elegant once you grok it.


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

Universal Principles of Design, Revised and Updated

125 Ways to Enhance Usability, Influence Perception, Increase Appeal, Make…

William Lidwell, Kritina Holden, Jill Butler

This book was wonderful! I learned that good design really can be universal, whether it's software, hardware, or something else.


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

Microsoft Windows User Experience

Microsoft Corporation, Microsoft Corporation Staff

That the Windows user interface guidelines were pretty straightforward and consistent circa Windows 2000, but Microsoft has dropped the ball in that area since Windows XP/Vista/7 and WPF has emerged.


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

Applications = Code + Markup

A Guide to the Microsoft Windows Presentation Foundation

Charles Petzold

That separating a book about WPF into a "XAML section" and a "code section" is a terrible way to organize it.


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

Framework Design Guidelines

Conventions, Idioms, and Patterns for Reusable .NET Libraries

Krzysztof Cwalina, Brad Abrams

That well-designed frameworks take a lot of effort to build. And that really smart people can reasonably disagree on important design decisions.


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

Programming PHP

Rasmus Lerdorf, Kevin Tatroe, Peter MacIntyre

That PHP can just about everything imaginable, but wow is it crazy.


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Articles & Blogs

Fire And Motion

Joel on Software

Feeling stuck? How to get going so that, sooner or later, you’ll win.


The Nerd Handbook

Rands In Repose

Tech Life An annoyingly efficient relevancy engine


Tools

Using a Commodore 64 as a kid is what hooked me

Visual Studio 2010

Background

I grew up on a dairy farm. I'm really proud of that, but let's just say that programming is a lot easier in the summers than baling hay.

I've climbed Kilimanjaro, been in five serious traffic accidents, and survived the dotcom era.

I'm a PC and I love Star Wars. Don't get me started about watches, maps, or wine--it could be a while before I stop.

But the most important thing about me is that I'm dad to the two greatest girls anybody could imagine.