on Mar 30, 2011
Craig Walker
Technology is the key to advancement. It doesn't have to be as hard as it is. My goal is to make a better place by improving the way things work.
This first bit deserves some explanation:
- All progress stems from the advancement and application of knowledge. This is true in a very fundamental way for all of humanity. On a less-grandiose scale, it also applies to business: success and growth come from expanding the capabilities of an organization through technology. (Note that I've substituted "technology" for "knowledge" for better soundbite-worthiness on this tech-heavy site.)
- Most organizations get really bad results from their experience with technology (and technology practitioners). There are lots of reasons for this. They've been discussed at length (especially in the past few years). However, the solutions are usually not practiced effectively. I make it a point to find out how to make systems work on both technical and interpersonal levels.
Do you think that I'm wrong on these ideas? Then let's figure out how, together. I love to discuss & debate with anyone who shares my desire to find the best answer.
There's lots to know about me, what I believe, and how I work (just as there is with anyone). There's far more to tell than will fit into a single text box. I've written more in the various sections below, but they're still just pieces of a very large puzzle. If you really want to know something, then just ask me; I'll give you the straightest & most honest answer I have. I'll hope you do the same for me as well. :-)
Technologies
c# java ruby ruby-on-rails sql osx windows database web javascript
vb6 coldfusion
Experience (9)
Computer Systems Analyst
Analysts International Corporation
1998 - 1999
Analysts International was a "vendor" (contracting company) for IBM in Rochester, MN: the birthplace of the AS/400 midrange computer. Even though I was an AIC employee, I worked with a team of IBMers on-site.
My team was titled "Software RAISE and Integration Test." RAISE stood for Reliability, Availability, Integrity, Scalability, and Efficiency. The idea behind the team was to test a new release of the AS/400 operating system by developing applications as a real software development team would. It was the last round of testing a release would undergo before it was distributed to customers.
While at IBM, I got to learn about an entire computer industry that was brand new to me; my previous experience was solely with desktop PCs. The AS/400 was a different beast entirely: multi-user, rock-solid, large, green-screen, a bit arcane, and with an army of professionals ready to support the customer.
Our team was part of the push to bring the AS/400 into the .com era. Java was sweeping the industry, and Enterprise JavaBeans was promoted as an important new technology. One of our major projects was making sure that an important 3rd-party product called "Tengah" worked on the AS/400. Tengah eventually became WebLogic Application Server, one of the big names in the middleware industry in the first half of the 2000's. Getting EJB experience in those early days was a key factor in getting my next job.
The biggest impact I had in this position was how I approached the job. It was technically a testing position, but I treated it like a development job: I analyzed our (fictitious) goal and tried to find the best route to solving the problems we encountered. This impressed our team leader; I was a young upstart, barely out of school, but I was thinking about things in ways that the veteran IBMers weren't. During my exit interview, my team lead said "we're sorry to lose you" (a mere two weeks after he'd fired one of my classmates for under-performing).
It wasn't a bad place to work by any means, but I knew fairly soon that it wasn't what I wanted. It was fundamentally a testing position; I wanted a place where I could build new things. So I moved on...
Software Engineer
HotOffice Technologies
1999 - 2000
HotOffice was a startup trying to achieve greatness in the days of the .com boom. It had an interesting product (web-based groupware targeted at small business) and was using cutting edge technologies (Enterprise Java Beans). My EJB experience from IBM was extremely rare at the time, so I was able to land the job and move to South Florida.
Once there, I got my first chance to work on "real" software projects (ie: ones that the world would actually use). My particular part of the system involved email delivery. (As it happens, I've built some sort of email component into every project I've worked on since.) It was very different than working at IBM: we had real constraints which were (deemed to be) important for the success of the product. We designed things with the goal of making them correct.
HotOffice had its share of talented and ambitious people. It was very enticing; I was able to build real applications that were going to be used on a real (and potentially world-changing) product. There were technical hurdles to overcome and lots of learning required to make it happen.
However, HotOffice had systemic problems that eventually doomed it. It was plagued by a fragile legacy codebase that was pushed well past its limits. Political decisions set the direction for the company. The relatively large number of employees meant that the company burned through its .com investment cash; when that ran out, HotOffice couldn't sustain itself. I saw the writing on the wall before it reached the point, and decided to leave on my own terms before I was forced out by necessity. (The forcing out came a few months later with the first major round of layoffs.)
HotOffice became an excellent learning experience about the dangers of poor decision making even with a good supply of talent. I did learn a lot and met lifelong friends there. It was a good decision to move there, and a good decision to leave.
Senior Software Engineer
Nutrio Technologies
2000 - 2006
Several ex-HotOffice employees joined a new startup called Nutrio, a web-based nutrition and weight-loss portal. The content itself wasn't very intriguing (though I did learn a lot of useful things about nutrition), but the work environment was exceptional. Nutrio was always focused on being lean, productive, and effective. The technical team started with myself and my supervisor; it stayed that small for several years, and then slowly started growing.
This is where I really cultivated my skills as a software developer; I had freedom to innovate yet requirements to constrain me to keeping productive. As the team grew I started learning how to share my knowledge and techniques with other (more junior) team members.
The most important thing I learned while at Nutrio was to "check and not guess". For example, if I was having a technical debate and made a claim, I had better make sure that my claim was actually correct before making it. Getting egg on my face after being proved wrong a few times showed me the necessity of this. This "facts over assumptions" creed sounds simple, but it's very rarely practiced.
More technically speaking: I was deeply involved in creating the website & supporting systems for Nutrio.com. The site was what I'd call a moderately high-traffic website (Alexa says that it's in the top 1M by traffic). It was 100% dynamically generated, so getting efficient access to data was important. I spent a lot of time integrating our site & data with companies. On top of that, I also helped manage the (Windows-based) servers and handled the system administration and networking for our office.
After six years, Nutrio was taken over by one of its competitors, eDiets.com. My working relationship with eDiets deserves its own section.
Software Developer/Consultant
eDiets.com
2006 - 2009
The eDiets takeover of Nutrio happened to coincide with my move from Florida, USA to Alberta, Canada. I still wanted to work with the company, people, and project, so I worked out a deal where I could telecommute.
Working remotely was very (some would say surprisingly) effective. It seems like anything is possible given enough bandwidth. Phone, email, IM, VPN, and remote desktop are all capable tools when used effectively.
One of things I learned while working remotely was the importance of written communication. Being able to write clearly and understand those who don't is a critical skill. Verbal communication is important, but written has several properties (such as persistence and asynchronicity) that make it much more useful.
The eDiets acquisition brought a lot of changes to the Nutrio team. The number of people involved grew substantially and began to branch. The most interesting part was seeing procedures that I had helped pioneer at Nutrio be adopted by others without any direct intervention on my part; they had become part of the "culture" of the organization.
I completed most of my work with eDiets in 2008, with occasional side-projects in 2009.
Software Developer/Consultant
Hybrid Medical Records Inc
2006 - 2010
HMR was my first real-world desktop/GUI application; everything I had done before that was either server-side or web-based.
It was also the first project where I was the only technical person involved; the design and implementation was completely up to me.
HMR was a fun project because I got to learn and use several technologies that were brand new to me. My work with Nutrio and eDiets over the previous years mostly involved rehashing well-worn paths in my experience.
Exploring these new technologies came with a price though. Each product introduced some sort of development overhead to the project: if I used product X in way Y then I was mostly fine, but if I needed to do Z then I was stuck fighting design inflexibility, bad documentation, and bugs. This slowed my development far more than I would have liked. Given that the time and cost budgets for HMR were very tight (as budgets usually are), I had to make some sacrifices on the implementation quality. The product still works very well, and the clients are happy with it, but it's less flexible than I would have liked. I chalk this up to an important learning experience.
The most interesting part of the project was stepping into a new subject domain (medical records in this case). I did all of the requirements gathering from people who had little technical expertise and only high-level ideas about what the product should do. I spent much of my time in discussions (via email) with the client / domain experts. I would take the snippets of disconnected information and use them to build a logically sound structure for the application. Again, being good at written communication (both reading and writing) was crucial, as was knowing which questions to ask to get the key information.
Software Developer/Consultant
Jim Pattison Lease
2007 - 2010
The technologies and products for JPL were fairly commonplace: internal/private applications for business users and customers. What's interesting about JPL is the work environment itself. When I came to JPL it had a long history of haphazard, directionless development. The technologies, products, and processes in use were outdated and significantly holding back effective development (even to the point of technical stagnation).
Making the technology department effective while still spending time on fulfilling business requests is a challenging task, to say the least. It's still in progress but there have been some real improvements. I personally got the department using Subversion for effective version control. I also was a major advocate for the transition to automated builds, continuous integration, and automated unit testing. In terms of development process improvements, my goals for the next year are migration to modern programming environments (C# 4.0/Visual Studio 2010), code reviews, effective database security schemes, wikification of IT and business-related information, and productive bug & task tracking for the development team.
Podcaster
Anachromystic Podcast
2009
My long-time colleague, Thomas "Teflon Ted" Davis and I recorded several episodes of a technology podcast. You can find it at The Anachromysic Podcast if you would like to give it a listen.
This was loads of fun. For years Ted and I had been tossing around the idea of recording and publishing our tech discussions. In 2009 Ted was looking for publicity and I was looking for a hobby, so we finally sat down and did it.
The problem was that, by 2009 (a decade after we first started working together) we had both gained enough (shared) experience that our individual knowledge about software development seemed to always align with the other's. This meant that we ended up agreeing with each other regularly. This lack of controversy makes for great work, but not so much for great radio. :-P
Still, we had great feedback. We never got very many listeners, but those that did seemed to enjoy the podcast a lot. We even managed to host an interview with a listener whom neither Ted nor myself had met before; he was a friend of a friend of Ted's.
Also, the podcast was a great excuse to dive into the world of audio recording. I did lots of research, got some good equipment, and learned how to manipulate audio. This was lots of fun; I always like to learn new fields outside of programming.
We haven't done an episode in a long while; both of us are really busy with work and other projects at the moment. I wouldn't call it dead though; we might pick it up again if we get the time and inclination.
Owner / Software Developer
SugarThrill
2009 - 2010
SugarThrill is a cake decorating website. It's a co-venture between my wife and myself and my first entrepreneurial venture.
My favorite part about building my own website and business is the freedom and responsibility. The business succeeds or fails based on my own decisions and capabilities (plus that of my wife); there's nobody else to blame or interfere. Having this control over my own destiny is very enjoyable, even if it is an awesome burden at times.
It's also very fun to get to apply all of the "soft" design, business, & marketing techniques that I've been reading and hearing over the past few years.
Technically it's a very exciting project too. One of the major reasons I started this site was to learn Ruby, Rails, and Git in a real-world environment. I've hit snags here and there but I'm very glad I did this; I can see the benefits that these techs can bring once they're familiar. It's also nice to get away from Java/C# and see the new perspective of Ruby. Doing so was surprisingly easy; most of the principles of object-oriented and functional programming still apply regardless of the specific language.
Unlike my other jobs and projects, I have 100% ownership of the SugarThrill code I wrote and can freely show it to anyone who is interested.
SoftCraft Bakery
SoftCraft Development
May 2010 - Current
"Bakery" is the working title for my current side project: an application that helps bakeries control costs by increasing accuracy when scaling recipes.
You can read more details about this project on my blog, Craig's Linked List.
I'm building this as a Rails 3 application. I'm hoping to make it a viable business, but at the very least it's a good way to get real Rails 3 development experience.
The code for this project is owned by me, and so I'm able to share it with the world.
Education
B. Sc. Computer Information Systems
DeVry Institute of Technology, Calgary
1995 - 1998
Graduated Summa Cum Laude (Latin for "really high GPA"). It was a big deal back then; it's not as much any more.
I chose to go to DeVry over other schools for three reasons:
- The focus on business-oriented education appealed to me.
- I got a scholarship that cut my tuition costs in half.
- It was located in Calgary, a city which I knew and liked.
DeVry is a for-profit school that focuses on "creating graduates with the skills that businesses require." Some describe this as "training instead of educating" (and, less charitably, "degree mills"). For this reason, it has a bit of a bad reputation. I'd say that whatever reputation they have is about 50% deserved, and 50% not. Of course, this requires further explanation.
DeVry is not terribly selective about who they accept and who they keep. In this respect, they fail one of Joel Spolsky's resume filtering criteria. I also think that they graduate some people who aren't very good software developers.
The catch is that I don't think that most mainstream colleges do a better job in this. There's certainly lots of bad programmers with university degrees. Certainly, if you've discussing graduates from MIT or Stanford or the like, you can claim a certain level of quality. However, the vast majority of developers aren't from those schools, so an employer will have to evaluate candidates from a much wider and less-well-known selection of schools.
I certainly haven't been held back by the "DeVry" on my degree, either in the knowledge I have, the skills I've acquired, or the jobs that I've held. (Of course, I am only one data point, and not a very representative one at that.)
The lesson here is that the major factor in determining the value of an employee is the qualities of the person, not the school that they went to.
(On the other hand, Joel is right; it's a somewhat useful factor when doing a first-pass filter on stacks of resumes. But then, that's what Stack Overflow Careers is trying to make obsolete.)
I didn't experience any of the horror stories that I've heard about some other for-profit schools. The instructors were acceptably good; a few were excellent. There was no funny business regarding financing and student loas. DeVry liked to extol its hired-graduate rate but never made any guarantees and was up front about its data filtering criteria (ie: "the graduate actually has to put effort into to looking for a job"). My experiences match what I've heard from students and faculty at other mainstream colleges.
I like that DeVry has a business-oriented slant to it. For non-technical (ie: non-"major") courses, we took business writing, financial math, accounting, workplace psychology, etc. These ended up being genuinely useful in my career. The lack of emphasis on humanities & fine arts doesn't bother me in the slightest; when I want to learn about those things, I can (and do) get them for a dollar fifty in late charges at the public library.
The best part of going to school was working as a Faculty Assistant, in particular helping the students in the labs. To be able to teach someone something, you have to really know it cold. Explaining the same thing a dozen times over also helps to cement it in your own mind.
Sun Certified Java Programmer
Sun Microsystems
2001
In 1999 I was looking for the next educational steps to advance my career. Sun was offering certification programs in Java, and these seemed like quick wins relative to the major undertaking of a Master's degree. So, I studied up a bit, took the test, and got my Programmer certification with an excellent score.
After I got the Programmer cert, I started looking at the next level up: Sun Certified Java Developer. A year or two later I signed up and started working on the test project, which was a mini-application.
While I was working on the app, I began to realize that I was going to run into problems. From the Java marketing material that Sun was pushing at the time (back when Java was The Big Thing) and the test guidelines, it was clear that Sun wanted the test applications to be developed in a certain Sun-approved way. The problem was that the techniques they outlined didn't seem exceptional; I was already doing more advanced, elegant & productive things at my work. I was halfway through building a nifty application, but I started seeing all the ways that the judges could deduct score for not doing it the Java Way.
I did finish the application (I still have it kicking around somewhere), but I never submitted it; I had lost interest in the certification. Instead, I began researching the factors that went into making an effective program, product, and organization. Looking back on it, I think that this was a better use of my time; it's better to have knowledge than resume fodder.
Stack Exchange Last seen 2 days ago
Open Source
curve-challenge
Oct 2010
bakery
May 2010 - Current
SoftCraft-WordPress-Theme
May 2010
sugarthrill-shopify-theme
Mar 2010
SugarThrill
Aug 2009 - Current; followed by 3 people
Tools
Commodore VIC-20
TextMate these days. Big fan of TextPad and Eclipse
Background
In addition to the experience I've listed above, I also have several other projects in the works. Most of them are whole businesses that I'm creating (as opposed to work I'm doing for other clients). I'll update my CV once they're ready for the public.
You can find me on the Internet at:
- My company/professional site: SoftCraft Development.
- I use Twitter regularly: @softcraft.
- I recorded a technology podcast with my colleague "Teflon" Ted: The Anachromystic Podcast
- I am an avid user of Stack Overflow. I also use Super User and Server Fault. You may see me on other Stack Exchange sites too; I generally use the same name and Gravatar.
- I have an account on GitHub (and Gists too). I try to release as much code as I can to the public.
- I'm on LinkedIn, though I don't spend a lot of time there.
There's lots of people using the name "softcraft". It's a really good name, and I wasn't the first. It does appear that I'm the most active entity that uses the name. I generally try to go by "SoftCraft Development" and/or "SoftCraft Canada" to help avoid confusion.
"Smart and Gets Things Done" is the employment buzzphrase of Stack Overflow Careers. I think that these are two qualities I possess. I want to work with people that have them too.
I am deliberate in everything I do.
I always have a reason. I try to make it a good one. If you tell me it's not a good reason, and can reasonably explain why, I'll probably agree and try to adjust my beliefs / actions accordingly. If I don't, then I consider it to be a personal failure.
I'm always looking for ways to do something better.
I know that "better" is an aggregation of many different qualities. Sometimes these qualities are in opposition to each other. I try to understand the tradeoffs so that we can make the correct choices given the current circumstances. When those circumstances change, I'm ready to make different tradeoffs. I'm looking for the greatest net result.
I give people the benefit of the doubt, at least to start with. I don't extend this to people who (mis)use it too often.
I believe that there's a best answer / absolute truth to everything. Knowing what that may be is another matter entirely.
Everyone is entitled to an opinion, but that doesn't mean that their opinions are true. In the end, we're all subject to the forces of Nature, and Nature doesn't care one bit for our opinions. Our beliefs should be adjusted to match our environment; the other way around simply doesn't work.
I know that you can't force a belief on anyone. (I definitely don't want beliefs forced on me.) I'll gladly discuss anything with anyone who comes in with an open mind. If you don't have that, then I'll leave you be... but expect me to be very cautious with anything you say.
I seek to know how things work on a fundamental level. Knowing how to do things is good. Knowing how things work means that you can leverage that knowledge to step outside the pre-drawn boundaries. Everything that we have is based on this.
I enjoy knowing things, especially useful things. I read Wikipedia for fun.
Time is the most valuable resource, since it is the most scarce. Even the richest people in the world don't have more minutes in their day than the poorest. This is why technology is so important; when applied properly, it lets us do more with the same amount of time.
This all sounds very serious, and it is, but I like good humor too. I have a (stereo)typical geek sense of humor. I love cleverness, both in myself and in others.
I want to be sincere, honest, direct, and open. Want to know something about me? Just ask! (But come with an open mind.)