Open source for MBAs: A primer
A novice-friendly, management-oriented explanation of the motivations behind and benefits to releasing your source, whether you're a hobbyist, a freelancer, a small business, or an enterprise.
Oro-Medonte, ON, Canada
I'm a self-proclaimed programming geek with an interest in human-computer interaction and UI/UX design. (Put simply, finding ways to make technology more comfortable, useful, and efficient)
Much to my embarrassment, I've also become rather buzzword-compliant along the way, what with my taste for fluid HTML layouts, progressive enhancement, automated testing (unit, regression, etc.), ReSTful APIs, and workflow optimization metrics like tap/click/keystroke counting.
Python is by far my favourite high-level language and I've dabbled in just about every type of task it can perform but I'm also quite familiar with bash shell scripting and PHP 5 (as much as their idiosyncrasies irritate me). In the browser, I'm very familiar with jQuery and getting pretty good with CoffeeScript, though I won't be satisfied with my understanding until I can properly memorize all of JavaScript's quirks.
I have done a little work in C, C++, Java, and Lua, but I wouldn't really call myself experienced and, aside from Lua, I haven't done much that really demands them yet. (Most of my creations are already firmly I/O-bound)
As for platforms, I'm a Linux geek through and through, but I have no problem targeting Windows... just don't make me use it as my primary development environment. I find it difficult to customize, ill suited to a terminal junkie, and distracting like a road full of store signs competing for attention.
July 2006 - Current
October 2005 - Current
2005 - Current
Proposed and completed alternative course project for Human-Computer Interaction course which was more in-line with real-world design pressures. Received A+ in the course overall.
Received perfect mark on scientific reasoning essay arguing that the open-source community is fundamentally a younger, less formalized variation on the scientific community which is focused on applying knowledge rather than producing it. Received A- in the course overall.
GitHub, Jul 2009 - Current; followed by 65 people; forked 15 times
An X11 analogue to WinSplit Revolution for people who don't want to use the Compiz Grid plugin
Mostly my own work so far (though the user interaction design is a clean-room copy of another program). Has a fix or two contributed by others. Also an all-nighter project being cleaned up.
GitHub, Jun 2009 - Current; followed by 9 people; forked 2 times
The Procrastinator's Timeclock, a minimal-hassle way to manage your time
My own design. Coding in the early stages was shared with a friend.
It has greatly exceeded my expectations as a productivity aid. Currently undergoing a rewrite to make it more useful and to free it from the baggage of being written in an afternoon while pulling an all-nighter.
GitHub, Sep 2009 - Apr 2013; followed by 4 people
A downloader/converter for reading fanfiction on portable devices.
All design and development so far is my own. Very early in its development but already useful to me on almost a daily basis. Rewrite in progress to allow it to share code with another project I'm preparing to make public.
GitHub, May 2012 - Current; followed by 3 people
Simple, lightweight daemon to prevent embarassing "Recently Used" entries in GTK+ applications
Completely written by me.
GitHub, Dec 2011 - Jan 2012
An in-development gmrun clone in GTK+ and Vala with xdg-open integration
My first foray into Vala programming.
A customized TiddlyWiki instance for organizing and sharing story ideas when you just have too many. Capable of saving a copy of itself emptied of all ideas so it can easily be reused.
Wrote several simple TiddlyWiki plugins specifically for it, customized and fine-tuned it heavily, and I use it several times a week.
A novice-friendly, management-oriented explanation of the motivations behind and benefits to releasing your source, whether you're a hobbyist, a freelancer, a small business, or an enterprise.
Stephan Sokolow’s Blog
A quick overview of the CoffeeScript language and potential tripping points from the perspective of someone already very familiar with Python but not Ruby. Spent a day flipping between first and second on /r/programming.
Stephan Sokolow's Blog
My scientific reasoning essay which received a mark of 100%, slightly reformatted for cleaner display online.
Argues that free/open-source software is to producing software as science is to building a understanding the world around us... just younger and with a "different upbringing".
An examination of why EU directive 2009/136/EC (commonly referred to as "the cookie law") will likely be an ineffective drag on the online economy at best and possibly even counter-productive.
Stephan Sokolow's Blog | Programming, Linux, Web, and the odd Fiction Review
A review of Fat-Free Framework that got linked from its website.
Stephan Sokolow’s Blog
A trust-oriented exploration of my reasoning for refusing to buy or pirate DRMed games.
Includes a large selection of links for ethical and free alternative sources of entertainment.

Regular Expressions for Perl, Ruby, PHP, Python, C, Java and .NET
Tony Stubblebine
Probably the only print-edition programmer's pocket reference that outdoes Google for convenience.
Much less bother than memorizing the differences between regexes as understood by Python, PHP, JavaScript, Vim, sed, egrep, and various Perl-based shell utilities.

Thomas Glover
From ASCII to wood screw pilot holes and the meaning of "10-4" to the average concentration of arsenic in granite, this unbelievably dense little book continues to keep me from choosing between hassle and expensive Canadian cellphone plans whenever I'm working away from the computer.

Barbara Czegel
This book (which I originally bought for a course I was taking) really helped me to actually think about how I converse with people on subjects they may not be proficient in... or even just subjects where our preconceptions may differ significantly.
It also was the first thing to really make me start to consciously examine the kinds of non-verbal cues like tone of voice and body language that I was sending.
UX Magazine | Defining and Informing the Complex Field of User Experience (UX)
An excellent exploration of how every ground rule in usability has exceptions and a basic overview of when and why to consider breaking them.
Joel on Software
An exploration of how and why the little things are so important to making a user interface feel good or bad.
This played a big part in validating and explaining what I'd already known in a very vague, intuitive sense for years.
O'Reilly Media's OpenP2P.com
Clay Shirky argues that micropayments (as envisioned back in the year 2000 and earlier) won't ever work, becase they overvalue cheap resources and undervalue expensive ones (users' time and anxiety).
A classic article. When I finally heard about Flattr, I thought back to this and was very impressed by how elegantly they solved the problem, simply by throwing out one assumed requirement: Replacing "The producer chooses a hard, per-user price" (and ends up with nothing because nobody buys into the system) with "The consumer effectively subscribes to Flattr once and their monthly amount gets divided between the producers".
useit.com: Jakob Nielsen on Usability and Web Design
My very first encounter with the concepts of UI design and usability. Along with the flurry of other Alertbox posts I read that day, probably the single biggest source of important guidelines I still use today.
A detailed analysis of why, if you don't stop at "consistency with the OS", it turns out that the MacOS/GNOME dialog box layout with OK buttons in the lower-right corner is actually superior.
A very illuminating list of problems involved in handling names in databases which you may not even have realized. (Not all of them will apply to all projects, but it's good to keep them in mind. For example, "a former slave may have no name" is more a government/NGO database problem than)
Generic 386 PC
Vim
You've no doubt heard the saying "born with a silver spoon in their mouth". Well, physical possibility and risk of electrocution aside, replace wealth with geekiness and that's me. My parents didn't know it at the time, but I had a full dose of the Asperger's Syndrome tendency to fixate on an area of interest early on and my mother still has pictures of me as a toddler, uncommonly interested in our original IBM PC.
Not much came of that, given my young age, but I was an early reader and, by the time I was 5 or 6, one of my favourite activities was reading a stack of old Byte magazines I'd found in the basement. I still vaguely remember skipping a "boring" article on computers in the soviet union to get to the next "good" (technical) article.
I'd later supplement that with catalogues from companies like Inmac and Misco (now TigerDirect.ca) and spend countless hours requesting free catalogues from companies like 3com so I could doodle out massive hypothetical networks on poster-sized sheets of paperboard.
while I did love computer games, I loved tinkering with DOS just as much (my father would occasionally call from work to say "Can you put Stephan on the phone? He locked me out of my laptop,") and, during the period where I was using an old Mac SE instead, my biggest complaint was "Where's the prompt? How do I write batch scripts?". (It probably would have helped if the copy of HyperCard came with documentation)
The biggest step forward came when I was around 8 or 9 and two big things happened:
First, we finally got a home PC which was neither an 8086 nor an office machine. (A white-box 80386 with 2MiB of RAM and Windows 3.1. God, I had so much fun on that thing.)
Second, my father decided to teach me a little bit of BASIC. QBasic 1.0 (Gotta love MS-DOS 5.0) quickly became one of my favourite ways to experiment... though, again, documentation was the limiting factor. (The Help file, some 80s books on programming in Commodore BASIC and the like, and, because we didn't live in a University town, no Internet).
Not much changed from then on (We got the Internet in 1997, but I didn't have anyone to mentor me into seeing the utility of things like the comp.lang.* parts of Usenet) until my first year of high school. I was given a book on Perl and, out of curiosity, I picked up a copy of MandrakeLinux 6.0. I only had one computer (By then, a 233Mhz Pentium with MMX) and dual-booting was a hassle, but I was off to a sputtering start.
Time passed and, somewhere along the way, I became both the alpha geek of my small-town high school and a novice with Python. (Given that chronic sleep deprivation didn't set in until Grades 11 and 12, I'm surprised I don't remember the exact details of how I started into my favourite language... but I do know I learned it using only online resources.)
The single biggest step probably occurred during the summer between Grades 11 and 12. I'd slowly been switching to a more Linux-like Windows desktop and, during that summer, I finally lost enough interest in gaming and got so fed up with Windows glitches, that I ditched my custom LiteStep desktop and switched, cold-turkey to Mandrake Linux 10.0. Given what a power user I was by then, it took me several months to get comfortable in the knowledge that, yes, I had learned enough about Linux to account for every likely eventuality.
That was also the summer I started growing out my hair from standard boys' cut I'd had since, as a little kid, I reacted to a shorter cut by wearing a paper bag and the summer immediately following the seeds of what is now my biggest non-computer hobby (Reverse-engineering the psychology behind perceiving fiction as good or bad) so, all 'round, an excellent year once I recovered from the brink of stress- and sleep-deprivation-induced nervous breakdown enough to appreciate it.
In the years since, most things of note tend to be recorded in my GitHub profile, so there's not really much to say. I realized that the term for my main area of interest was "Human-Computer Interaction", I expanded my skills, and I recognized and worked hard to mitigate the effects of my high-functioning Asperger's Syndrome.
These days, my main experiments seem to focus on ways to make websites more intuitive, use collaborative filtering ("If you like this, then try...") in new contexts, and balance the user's strength at pattern recognition with the machine's ability to work with massive amounts of data. If it'll make my life more efficient, I've probably got plans to dabble in it.