I love software and I love technology, but I realize that neither means anything without people. Software is for people first and computers second. Without the user our software is meaningless and it is our imperative as developers to always keep the user in mind.
I believe in the power of the network effect, and that a system's value increases with its user base. I also believe that the fundamental purpose of all of software is to facilitate human communication. Even the most humble of schedulers contribute to this aim.
Technology does not solve problems. Humans leveraging technology solve problems. I don't believe in building systems that try to solve a human or organizational problem by force. I've seen these systems fail - the users either rebel or reject the system wholesale. Instead I believe in building systems that that guide the user toward effective problem solving.
I believe in bringing transparency to opaque processes. I believe that a user should never have to type the same thing twice. I believe that the Single Responsibility Principle applies to all layers of software architecture and that system integration and collaboration are two of the highest ideals.
In my world, the user comes first and everything else falls into place.
| favorites | c#3.0 asp.net-mvc tsql windbg best-practices |
| likes | java mysql python webforms jquery |
| dislikes | vb6 |
Experience
White House Communications Agency Systems Software Programmer Analyst 2005 - Current
I am a Renaissance Programmer - I do it all. I talk to customers and solicit requirements. I design the software, the UI, and the database. I build the code, test the code, deploy the code, and support the code.
As a team lead at WHCA, I have developed and shipped numerous projects in support of Presidential Operations.
I developed the Presidential Call Log and Daily Activity Reporting system, which logs and reports on all Presidential phone calls for reporting to the White House Chief of Staff.
I developed the Travel Credential system for printing and tracking all Presidential travel credentials.
I developed the Personnel Status Tracker, which gives Agency leadership a real-time view of where all personnel are located and what their duty status is.
I developed the Universal Validation Filter, which acts as a filter in the HTTP pipeline, redirecting users to data validation pages when certain conditions are met.
In addition, I provided continued support to the existing HR, Finance, and Logistics systems.
Additionally, I pioneered the adoption of a structured software development process within the agency, contributing the initial 45 pages of technical documentation to the project wiki and advocating for best practices.
Headquarters, Defense Courier Service Software Architect 2004 - 2005
Defense Courier Service is the UPS for the US Government. At DCS, I was the tool guy and the web guy.
I redesigned the public web site, adding customer focused tools like package tracking and delivery date prediction.
I built an internal software update tool, much like Windows Update, for easily updating our internal software around the world.
Additionally, I advocated for, researched, procured, and implemented a real configuration management solution for the development shop. They were using a shared directory before.
Standard Systems Group Programmer 2002 - 2004
While at Standard Systems Group, I worked on the modernizing the Combat Ammunition System - porting it from an old, green-screen application to a modern J2EE based web application. At the time, I was a junior developer, but I still managed to have a huge impact on the project.
I designed and implemented a performance instrumentation system for measuring the end user experience across the Air Force WAN.
I diagnosed and re-architected a core ammunition planning report, reducing the run time from one hour to one minute and saving the Air Force 20k man hours annually.
I fixed numerous bugs and problems in the system.
I also focused on improving the quality of the software process by drafting the first shop Coding Standards and Best Practices document and establishing the baseline for the standard development environment load.
Education
University of Maryland University College B.S. Computer Science 2003 - 2008
Graduated with honors (3.8/4.0 GPA). Completed entire college degree in six years while working full time - I am that hard core.
Other
Projects and Links
Over the years, I've developed a number of small pet projects. Three projects went far enough to be considered releasable.
MPTime
MPTime is a time keeping application used in the judging of Science Olympiad tournaments. The application tracks teams as a series of tiles that move through multiple queues as their team progresses through the judging process. MPTime is written in Java and is based heavily on the Model-View-Controller and Observer patterns. http://www.ryanmichela.com/files/MPTime2.zip
JavaBot
JavaBot is a chat robot built in Java that connects to different instant messaging platforms. JavaBot is based on a pipeline architecture, where messages come in from a communications end point, pass through an internal router and are handed off to a line processor for processing. Once the line processor has formulated a response, the process reverses. Due to the nature of writing a network application, JavaBot is highly multithreaded. http://www.ryanmichela.com/files/JavaBot2.zip
Battle Tetris
Battle Tetris is a two-player networked Tetris clone. I used Battle Tetris as an opportunity to explore some of the Gang of Four design patterns. Battle Tetris is based on a small Domain Model and Object Factories, with a little bit of Dependency Injection where appropriate. http://www.ryanmichela.com/files/BattleTetris.zip
Background
I love all aspects of software. I enjoy working with customers and using technology to solve their problems. I am an expert in multiple platforms and technologies and I never stop learning.
My love of computers began when my parents inherited an old Texas Instruments TI-99 from my grandfather. I played a lot of Hunt the Wumpus and toyed with the programming guide. I was six at the time and a little too young to understand what I was doing, but by by age 10, I had my programming groove on.
I wrote a network chat program in Turbo Pascal while in eighth grade, and attempted to write a MUD in twelfth. In between, I dabbled in many other projects, learning and growing with the Web. I even worked as a computer repair technician up until I graduated high school. I've always been fascinated with network programming and the power of computers to facilitate human communication.
I joined the Air Force out of high school as a computer programmer. My first job was working on the Combat Ammunition System in Montgomery, AL, but when the opportunity came to move the Washington, DC, I took it. I have since worked with the Defense Courier Service and most recently, the White House Communications Agency. I take great pride in my current job - not many programmers can say they wrote software for the President.
Not only do I program for my day job, but I also donate my skills to charity. I served for two years as the webmaster for the Washington DC chapter of the Association for Computing Machinery and continue to work with the National Science Olympiad, judging tournaments, writing computer and engineering events, and helping to promote science education in America.
I love my job and the people I work with, but my enlistment is up and I am ready to move on. I want to find a company that focuses on delivering innovative products that help improve the lives of others. I've been in government and consumed the innovation of others. Now I want to be the guy who makes the real magic happen.
| First Computer | TI-99/4 |
| Favorite Editor | Visual Studio 2008 |
