Hooking up SQLalchemy with whoosh
Piece Of Py(thon)
I was talking to Tim VanSteenburgh (we both do work for Geek.net) and he had a proof of concept for automatically updating a search index when a change happens to a…
I am passionate about the quality of my work and I am thankful each day to get paid for something I love doing.
I like to make the percentage of "nosetests --with-coverage" go higher. I am pragmatic and I am definitely of the philosophy, "make it work, make it better, make it awesome, and cover it with crap-loads of tests". No code I make goes unloved and I enjoy the re-factoring process.
I enjoy mentoring and paired programming. I love the experience and knowledge you gain from them. I love that they strengthen team bonds and working relationships. Everyone who participates in them gains a better understanding of how their co-workers (colleagues) work and the end result is that everyone works better together and individually.
I am looking for a company that is refreshing. Your software doesn't have to be bleeding edge or use the latest OSS alpha for everything. You don't have to be the first to do it, but you should be trying to do it better. I am looking for a company that cares about quality as well as its developers and its creative minds. I am looking for a company that understands the difference between making good software and awesome software.
python sqlalchemy mongodb git jquery django pyramid pylons
.net windows
Geeknet, Inc
July 2011 - Current
I work for Geeknet, Inc on the SourceForge Directory team. Our focus is on developing and maintaining the Allura project, which is the open source project that powers http://sf.net
Since starting for Geeknet, I've helped to develop migration scripts to move legacy data in to our new event and aggregation system. I continue to work on our REST interface that will allow 3rd-party applications to easily get information about a SourceForge project. I've also contributed by closing out a handful of stories that are bugs or user reported issues.
CBS Interactive
February 2011 - October 2011
I work at CBS Interactive as part of the mySimon.com team. We develop and maintain the mySimon.com website which is a Django based shopping and price comparison website.
The existing code base is aging and we are tasked with not only repaying some of the technical debt that has been incurred over the last couple years but also working with the marketing and commercial teams to add new features and extending existing features during contest/holiday months and months with special programming (NCAA tournament for example). This makes a lot of our work time sensitive in nature.
As part of my first project at CBSi, I was handed a vaporware project and told to make it gold! This resulted in a bit of learning curve having never designed or worked with a site intended for a mobile platform. The result was http://m.mysimon.com.
Tower Hill Insurance Group
September 2007 - September 2010
My primary responsibility was as the lead developer for the Corporate Note and Diary project. This project is a policy and claim note and diary task service that is used by about 90% of the company. The users of the system range from internal users in departs like Accounting, Marketing, and Claims to our external Agents.
The Corporate Diary project was developed against pre-existing legacy infrastructure. These existing in an Oracle schena and I used Python with the Pylons framework to expose these tables as a service.
I then began the process of integrating the newly exposed services in to two pre-existing applications, our web based application and our desktop application. The former was done using jQuery, jQuery-UI, and its many plugins. The later was done using a custom C++ DLL that could bridge between the legacy applications "Bus and Task" system and my wxWidget application.
Over the life of the project the main service (the Pylons application) has been re-factored three times. Each time allow for further cleanups and proper data normalization practices to take place.
A big challenge with this project was dealing with the legacy systems, out-of-date schemas, bad data, and poor design within the pre-existing systems. That was one of the major reasons were focused on wrapping the legacy system with a common interface that all internal systems could program to, so that as we did cleanup, we wouldn't be having to re-write every area that selected from and inserted in to these tables.
Since the projects initial deployment in late 2008, to-date this service has handled over 2.8 million claim and policy notes, over 500k individual diary tasks, and has maintained an uptime of 99.9%
GriZella, Inc.
December 2004 - September 2007
My primary responsibility was to develop new and help support existing products for the suite of Load and Truck posting, matching, and searching solutions developed by GriZella, Inc.
I took lead in a multi-site parsing and posting solution. Where developed a highly optimized parsing solution with C++ and Xerces to deal with a wide selection of file types and formats from our customers. Using a slimmed down implementation of our desktop software ported to run on Linux we used Python at a system level to bridge these together to create an enterprise level automated posting solution for our customers.
We developed individual sites on a consulting basis. These were done using Pylons and mySQL. Usually simple CRUD sites, but most of the time involved integrating the site in to some existing legacy data-source. Radius search over shipper databases for example.
Our desktop solution allowed users to post their available loads/trucks to many websites with a single click. Dealing with each of the 3rd party websites and maintaining the different posting APIs for each was a constant battle and over my time there we developed meta solutions to cope with this and make adding new sites or modifying existing ones as easy as performing an update/insert statement.
At the time of my leaving; the company was posting over 100k loads and 5k trucks daily to each 3rd party website of which there was 60.
Livebridge, Inc.
September 2003 - November 2004
My primary responsibility was to develop and maintain a web-based solution for CSRs to enter, track, and manage incoming WLNP (Wireless Local Number Portability) requests from our clients customers.
I was the lead developer for this project and worked with a UI designer, our clients technical specialists for API support, and our Director of Engineering for project direction. This application was used by the CSRs to create, track, and maintain active Wireless number ports through the system as they went from carrier to carrier.
Dealing with each of the unique porting systems was the hardest part of this project as each carrier had different APIs and response types. This system was used around the clock for over 2 years after I left the company during the peak of the WLNP programs here in the USA and never experienced any unscheduled downtime.
Other minor responsibilities included Avaya switch programming and monitoring. Designing and performing reports.
NakedTech, LLC
January 2000 - Current
Formally known as Axign Consulting, LLC. I have kept my own business to make it easy for myself to do 1099 work.
Worked as a remote and on-site consultant providing development and technology solutions to wide variety of clients. Also involved minor sales and on-site training. Implemented custom time tracking solutions, custom ticket solutions, and people management solutions.
Spent 6-months designing, developing, and deploying the backend for a penny auction site.
Most recently I've worked as a consultant for Geek.net working on the Alllura project (which is the new Sourceforge base).
MindView Consulting, LLC
July 1999 - December 1999
Design and develop point of sale software for local restaurant clientele in the greater Seattle-Tacoma area. Development areas included Palm platform development and services for HP-UX servers. Primary development languages were C and C++ and some Smalltalk.
This was my first "real" job. I left school at the advice of a recruiter on campus to dive in to the world of computer programming and the millions to be made by hooking up with the next big Internet company!
Sadly this wasn't one of those companies and it ran of out money and steam 6-months after I hired on.
Pierce Community College
1998 - 1999
Graduated with my two-year degree in less than two years. Maintained a 3.8 GPA. I applied for my associates degree after being recruited to go work for a local tech company in Bellevue, WA knowing that I might not make it back to school for a while and having a 2-year degree in hand was better than 2-years worth of credits on paper.
I eventually plan to finish my higher education by completing my bachelors and continuing on to get a masters in business administration because I feel many of us tech savvy people could better leverage our skill set if we just had a solid foundation of business fundamentals.
An easy way for communities to organized, share, and assemble recipes in to cookbooks for online and print media.
Creator of the project.
This is the codebase for SourceForge 2.0, which includes a plugin framework and integrated Wiki, Tracker, SCM (svn git hg), Discussion, and Blog tools.
Contributor. Working on extending the REST interface to easily allow 3rd-party tools and integration.
Database mapping layer for MongoDB on Python. Includes schema enforcement and some facilities for schema migration.
Contributor. Implemented MapperExtensions for ORM Events.
Custom pyramid framework scaffolds
Aug 2011 - Current; followed by 2 people
Creator of the project.
Pyramid, SQLalchemy, Whoosh
Aug 2011; followed by 6 people; forked 2 times
Creator of the project.
Nursery Nanny! Create your church nursery schedule in minutes! This is volunteer scheduling made easy.
Co-Developer and partner.
A project that allows communities and organizations to come together to share recipes and build cookbooks quick and easy.
Creator
Piece Of Py(thon)
I was talking to Tim VanSteenburgh (we both do work for Geek.net) and he had a proof of concept for automatically updating a search index when a change happens to a…
Piece Of Py(thon)
After Beazley's talk at PyCon "Understanding the Python GIL" I released I had never done any work that released the GIL, spawned threads, did some work, and then…
Piece Of Py(thon)
You see lots of examples on the net for SQLalchemy. Implementing a blog, implementing a wiki, even other articles on implementing tags. Some are good, some are pretty…
Steven D. Levitt, Stephen J. Dubner
Commodore 64
vim gvim