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on Aug 24, 2011

Robert C. Barth

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Currently Senior Software Engineer at Apollo Group - IM/Chat, and President/CEO at Norimek Software Solutions Corporatino.

Seventeen years of software engineering experience in various aspects of software development including coding, design, architecture, requirements analysis, usability testing, project management, and software engineering team management.

Specialties include software architecture for Microsoft .net-based systems with MS SQL Server back-ends and management of software engineering teams for high-volume/high-availability public-facing websites.

Technologies

Experience (16)

Senior Software Engineer

Apollo Group - IM/Chat

March 2011 - Current

Current responsibilities include working on the client-side of the real-time chat client for our student website.

Engineering Manager

Apollo Group - Research and Development/Forward Engineering

October 2010 - March 2010

Participated in the research & development group seeking ways to employ new technologies to provide an innovative experience for our students. This work is mostly non-disclosable under NDA.

Engineering Manager

Apollo Group - Materials Authoring/eCampus

November 2008 - October 2010

Managed the Materials Authoring & Delivery software engineering team of the Integrated Classroom suite of products. Our products' user base covers the entire faculty, staff, and student population of the University of Phoenix (and other affiliated Apollo Group institutions of higher learning) consisting of over 400,000 users.

Supervised redesign of key aspects of existing software infrastructure, reducing page response times an order of magnitude.

Did the usual manager stuff: kept people outside my team out of my team's hair, went to meetings, monitored vacation schedules, approved purchases, held team-building barbecues, etc.

Contractor

Apollo Group

July 2008 - October 2008

Contract-to-hire position to manage the the Materials Authoring & Delivery team of the Integrated Classroom suite of products.

President/CEO

Norimek Software Solutions Corporatino

January 2001 - Current

This is my consulting firm under which I perform various after-hours contracts.

Contractor

nFocus

August 2006 - December 2007

• Architected and participated in the software development of the Combined Arms Training Strategy (CATS) system for the U.S. Army. This application permits the U.S. Army to create standardized training regimens for U.S. Soldiers.
• Aided in architecture and participated in the software development of the TROUPERS application used by the U.S. Army National Guard. This application permits the ARNG to budget and schedule training for all soldiers for the upcoming fiscal year.
• Participated in the software development of the DTMS which permits commanders in the U.S. Army, U.S. Army Reserve, and U.S. Army National Guard to schedule training for individual units and soldiers.

Lead Software Architect

ICI Services Corporation

March 2005 - August 2006

• Architected redesign of their flagship community portal product. This product is sold to master-planned communities as an amenity for residents moving into the community as a way to foster relationships and interactivity among neighbors.
• Managed the team of four developers and one quality assurance engineer to ensure that a quality product was delivered.
• Formalized the software development process, including introducing written specifications, formal QA, design reviews, etc.

Contractor

Teacher's Pal, Inc.

January 2005 - January 2005

• Created an import application to import data from a competing product into their software for use by their customers. This application is a windows forms application utilizing VisualBasic 6.0 and MS SQL Server 7.0

Contractor

Arizona Department of Education

October 2001 - November 2004

• Architected the Child Nutrition Program system, which consisted of modules for the National School Lunch Program, Child and Adult Food Care Program, and Family Day Care Home food programs. This system permits schools and day care homes that participate in the various programs to apply for the programs, and, once accepted, submit claim forms for reimbursement of meals served.
• Lead the team of six developers from start to finish, providing leadership as well as mentoring junior developers

Contractor

Oregon Department of Education

October 2004 - October 2004

• Architected the database design for the Child Nutrition Program for the Oregon Department of Education. Since the program is a Federal entitlement program, each state administers this program and the work that was involved in at ADE permitted me to transfer that knowledge to help ODE as well. Each state, however, administers their program a bit differently, so a different design was needed for ODE. The deliverables for this project were an E/R diagram describing the database as well as a data dictionary describing all of the elements.

Contractor

Fibre Box Association

April 2001 - November 2001

• Designed and built a COM+ component-based software system to automate the Frequently Asked Questions portion of their website. The system shows the questions asked along with their answers; permits visitors to ask new questions; handles the administration of answering new questions; and handles taking new and old questions on and off-line.
• Performed some monthly maintenance duties for data presentation on their website as well as other month-to-month website maintenance.

Contractor

Banner Health

June 2001 - June 2001

• Designed and programmed an API for interfacing some of their legacy systems to their web-based applications. Also designed and programmed a secure login/user-access API for use with their web applications. Full documentation for the public interfaces of the API was provided.

Contractor

Management Technology America

September 2000 - May 2001

• Participated on a team of seven developers creating a point-of-sale and inventory management system. The system included modules for sales orders, purchase orders, inventory tracking, costing, pricing, and order picking & fulfillment.

Contractor

Arizona Department of Education

March 1998 - September 2000

• Architected and programmed the School Report Cards system, which provided all public schools in Arizona the ability to enter school report card data (not student grades, but rather data related to the performance of the school as a whole) via the web and then these data are audited and approved by ADE staff, and mailed to parents.
• Aided in the architecture and programmed as part of a nine person team the School Apportionment system. This system, utilizing various attendance and other data, calculates the apportionment of Federal and state funds each school in a district in the state of Arizona will receive.

Assistant Treasurer (Programmer/Analyst)

Bankers Trust Company

March 1998

• Architected and programmed the BT Account Reconciliation+ application which permits clients to create issuance data and upload it to the bank as well as view current issuance data.
• Participated in a six person team programming the Commercial Check application which permits users to create and print paper checks and upload issuance data to the bank.

Senior Programmer

Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

March 1995 - April 1996

• Participated as a member of a two-person maintenance team writing various updates for the Forms Management System, which was a software application used by the Statistics Department staff to schedule data-entry work.
• Designed and programmed a utility application for use by the Statistics Department to permit easier entry of a particularly large and cumbersome table that appears in the Wall Street Journal each day.

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Education

B.S. Computer Science

Rocherster Institute of Technology

1992 - 1994

No degree obtained... left to go to work, but I did get the core CS curriculum complete. School and I don't get along; I prefer to study subjects I am interested in on my own and at my own pace.

Stack Exchange Last seen 2 days ago

Reading

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Slack

Getting Past Burnout, Busywork, and the Myth of Total Efficiency

Tom DeMarco

This book solidified (in my mind) the need to give people (software engineers) time to actually think about what they're doing so they can actually take into consideration the bigger picture of the product they're developing. Running people at a frantic pace produces rote code (and probably hordes of bugs), but doesn't produce a good, customer-pleasing product.


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The Mythical Man-Month

Essays on Software Engineering, Anniversary Edition

Frederick P. Brooks

The seminal work on why adding people to your project makes your project later. And all these years later, I really do wish we could throw the first one away because you learn so much about the problem domain during version 1.0 development that there are bound to be areas of huge compromise if not flat-out mistakes. Of course, you run into the demon of ever-evolving requirements, so hopefully agile development practices can save us from ourselves.


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The Design of Design

Essays from a Computer Scientist

Frederick P. Brooks

The importance of designing your software rather than just jumping in and starting coding.


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Code Complete

A Practical Handbook of Software Construction

Steve McConnell

An actual how-to manual of getting things done. If you're new to software engineering, or just got out of college, this is exactly the stuff you generally learn on-the-job.


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Peopleware

Productive Projects and Teams

Tom DeMarco, Timothy Lister

What didn't I learn from this book? This book basically shaped my management style. Now, if just everyone who is responsible for a budget that involves software engineers would read it, we'd all have a quiet space with minimal distractions to work in (amongst other things).


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Waltzing With Bears

Managing Risk on Software Projects

Tom DeMarco, Timothy Lister

This book solidified the meaning of risk on projects to me, and taught me how to effectively highlight and deal with it.


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Rapid Development

Taming Wild Software Schedules

Steve McConnell


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Software Project Survival Guide

Steve McConnell

If you've never run a software project before, this book will teach you the rudiments of pre-agile software project management. Even so, it still has some valuable information that applies today.


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Software Estimation

Demystifying the Black Art

Steve McConnell


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Death March

Edward Yourdon

Why forced labor camps don't produce good code. And why your 80-hour a week team is less productive than it was when it "only" worked 40 hours a week (hint: they're doing stuff they would normally do after-hours during work; that stuff still has to get done).


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Facts and Fallacies of Software Engineering

Robert L. Glass

One of my most favorite books. This book is ripe with information many people in the software industry have just plain wrong.


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Software Conflict 2.0

The Art and Science of Software Engineering

Robert L Glass


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The Inmates Are Running the Asylum

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

Alan Cooper


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Don't Make Me Think

A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability, 2nd Edition

Steve Krug

How to make interactions with your software basically automatic. This is very important for engineers who like complexity and think that clicking fifteen things to configure something just the way they want is what everyone wants. People hate choice.


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The Design of Everyday Things

Donald A. Norman

Excellent book about how things (everything, not just computer stuff) are designed for ease-of-use (or lack thereof). Really starts to make you think when you go into a store and the door handles are in a stupid place.


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Founders at Work

Stories of Startups' Early Days (Recipes

Jessica Livingston

Great insight into the minds of people who started a bunch of great companies.


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Coders at Work

Reflections on the Craft of Programming

Peter Seibel


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Good to Great

Why Some Companies Make the Leap... and Others Don't

Jim Collins

Excellent book about how to run a company. The biggest take-aways for me were getting the right people on the bus, the wrong people off, and getting the bus headed in the right direction; and the hedgehog concept.


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Jack

Straight from the Gut

Jack Welch, John A. Byrne

A lot of people hate Jack Welch, but in this autobiography you learn why he made the decisions that he did while at GE and gives great insight into his style of management. Although I'm not sure the 90/10 rule for firing annually works to infinity since eventually you get the best people and now your managers are just hiring sacrificial lambs for the end-of-year cut.


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The Art Of War

Sun Tzu

Although not much into committing acts of war myself, nor responsible for a battalion of troops, this book is a timeless look at strategies that apply not only to the battlefield. If for nothing else, it's nice to know them in case someone is using them on you.


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The Prince

Niccolo Machiavelli

Is it better to be loved or feared? Machiavelli says feared. I say false dichotomy.


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Framework Design Guidelines

Conventions, Idioms, and Patterns for Reusable .NET Libraries

Krzysztof Cwalina, Brad Abrams

Updated version that I picked up to see if anything had changed.


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Framework Design Guidelines

Conventions, Idioms, and Patterns for Reusable .NET Libraries

Krzysztof Cwalina, Brad Abrams

Great do's and don'ts for creating API's in .net. I would even go so far as to say it's not a bad read for other (non-Microsoft) languages, as well. Many engineers are not good at making their code easily usable by others and this book helps teach that.


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Concurrent Programming on Windows

Joe Duffy

Doing multi-threaded programming in Windows? Get this book.


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Learning Python, Second Edition

Mark Lutz, David Ascher

Kind of long-winded book on Python. Here's what you need to know if you've never seen the language: it has no block markers, so blocks are identified by indentation level, which cannot be arbitrary. Neither can line breaks/whitespace. Everything is duck-typed, and without a decent IDE, it's very difficult to keep the types returned from functions/methods straight in your head.


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Core Java

Cay S. Horstmann, Gary Cornell


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Core Java, Vol. 2

Advanced Features, 8th Edition

Cay S. Horstmann, Gary Cornell


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

The C# Programming Language

Anders Hejlsberg, Mads Torgersen, Scott Wiltamuth, Peter Golde


StackOverflow.Models.CVBook

jQuery in Action

Bear Bibeault, Yehuda Katz

A little book about how to use jQuery that's really old now. The online docs are so good, this really wasn't necessary.


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Real World Haskell

Bryan O'Sullivan, John Goerzen, Don Stewart

Before learning Erlang, I wanted to learn a fairly popular functional language to get my mind straight and Haskell is what I chose.


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Programming Erlang

Software for a Concurrent World

Joe Armstrong


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Algorithms of the Intelligent Web

Haralambos Marmanis, Dmitry Babenko


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Programming Collective Intelligence

Building Smart Web 2.0 Applications

Toby Segaran


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C++ Primer

Stanley B. Lippman, Josée Lajoie, Barbara E. Moo


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C Programming Language

Brian W. Kernighan, Dennis M. Ritchie


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Building Scalable Web Sites

Building, Scaling, and Optimizing the Next Generation of Web Applications

Cal Henderson


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Universal Principles of Design, Revised and Updated

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

William Lidwell, Kritina Holden, Jill Butler

Great primer for the non-design-minded (e.g. engineers) to help you make stuff that doesn't look like it total crap.


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Design Patterns

Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software

Erich Gamma, Richard Helm, Ralph Johnson, John M. Vlissides

Every software engineer has to own this. It's required at birth. Yes, engineers are born, not made. :-)


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Head First Design Patterns

Elisabeth Freeman, Eric Freeman, Bert Bates, Kathy Sierra

In case the standard G4 book is too hard to understand (and it kind of is because the examples, uh, suck), this book is very nice to solidify the concepts.


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Information Dashboard Design

The Effective Visual Communication of Data

Stephen Few

Designing dashboards of information for other people to consume? This would be a good book to help you make them so that the critical information is easily digestible.


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Compilers

Principles, Techniques, and Tools

Alfred V. Aho, Monica S. Lam, Ravi Sethi, Jeffrey D. Ullman

How to write compilers. 'Nuff said.


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Cloud Application Architectures

Building Applications and Infrastructure in the Cloud

George Reese


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Hadoop

The Definitive Guide

Tom White

Nice book about how to use map/reduce on Hadoop to solve large-scale data problems before the end of mankind.


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Building Social Web Applications

Establishing Community at the Heart of Your Site

Gavin Bell


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Information Architecture for the World Wide Web

Designing Large-Scale Web Sites

Peter Morville, Louis Rosenfeld


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Advanced .NET Debugging

Mario Hewardt


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CLR Via C#

Jeffrey Richter

Great book on the ins and outs of how C# works with the CLR. If you're doing any C# work, you need to own/read this book.


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Requirements Analysis

From Business Views to Architecture

David C. Hay


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Software Requirements

Karl E. Wiegers

Great book about take and record written software requirements. Unfortunately, the days of written requirements have gone the way of the dodo in favor of user stories, which have half the information and a quarter of the usefulness, but I can pine for the "old-days" if I want to. People who can take feature requests and turn them into useful/detailed requirements documentation are few and far between.


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Essential Silverlight 3

Ashraf Michail

Needed to learn some Silverlight for a project.


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The Usability Engineering Lifecycle

A Practitioner's Handbook for User Interface Design

Deborah J. Mayhew

Understanding how to design usability into your product. Great book.


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Handbook of Usability Testing

Howto Plan, Design, and Conduct Effective Tests

Jeffrey Rubin, Dana Chisnell

How to do usability testing, mostly concentrating on USEFUL testing.


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Observing the User Experience

A Practitioner's Guide to User Research

Mike Kuniavsky


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Paper Prototyping

The Fast and Easy Way to Design and Refine User Interfaces

Carolyn Snyder

How to do user interface testing without writing a line of code. Makes it cheap and fast, and you get basically the same results, earlier.


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A Practical Guide to Usability Testing

Joseph S. Dumas, Janice C. Redish


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Understanding Your Users

A Practical Guide to User Requirements Methods, Tools, and Techniques

Catherine Courage, Kathy Baxter


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The Persona Lifecycle

Keeping People in Mind Throughout Product Design

John Pruitt, Tamara Adlin


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Rapid Contextual Design

A How-to Guide to Key Techniques for User-Centered Design

Karen Holtzblatt, Jessamyn Burns Wendell, Shelley Wood


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User and Task Analysis for Interface Design

JoAnn T. Hackos PhD, Janice C. Redish


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Designing Web Usability

Jakob Nielsen


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Prioritizing Web Usability

Jakob Nielsen, Hoa Loranger


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Beautiful Evidence

Edward R. Tufte

As with all of Tufte's books, besides being eminently useful in teaching you how to present information, the book itself is gorgeous to read/look at.


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The Visual Display of Quantitative Information

Edward R. Tufte

This is the first Tufte book I read, which caused me to go out and buy all of his others. Really brought home how to display information to people in a way that makes sense without hiding the meaning or obscuring the facts. Really makes you think when you see a chart or graph on the front page of a newspaper (remember those, lol) that makes no sense whatsoever (USA Today, I'm looking at you).


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Envisioning Information

Edward R. Tufte


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Visual Explanations

Images and Quantities, Evidence and Narrative

Edward R. Tufte, Edward R Tufte


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