I'm not a huge fan of resumes, but alas I do, in fact, do (and have done) things in case you're interested. Find me at http://iamvery.com.
- helped users with day-to-day issues involving their desktop and network
- deployed new VOIP phones
- managed company's Apple computers
- developer on a Java UAV-related project (US Army contract)
- design/develop website for UAV-related project - https://ucsarchitecture.org
- maintain/develop "old" congressional website
- design/develop updated congressional website, migrating existing data to new site - https://cards.dynetics.com (passworded)
- maintain production server for new site
I spent a lot of time while at Dynetics becoming aquainted with Ruby, Rails, and teaching myself automated testing habits.
- worked longterm on new & legacy Rails applications with contract clients
- avid code reviewer
- team lead
- instructor for our Ruby on the Server class
- author on the BNR and my personal blogs
- light OSS contributions - https://github.com/iamvery
- spoke at NSHuntsville, hsv.rb, and Barcamp 2014 (lightning talk)
- accepted to speak at Ancient City Ruby in March
My time at BNR has been growth hyperdrive. I've become something of a Git, testing, and software design zealot. I've had a chance to lead teams and begin teaching. I'm especially excited about teaching and speaking opportunities at the moment.
Best place to find code samples is Github. I don't have a ton of code that is publicly sharable, but these represent my testing habits pretty well.
- https://github.com/iamvery/rails-api-example - built for a blog post
- https://github.com/iamvery/snapme - pretty dated, but an example CLI tool
- https://github.com/iamvery/hype - personal exploratory project, currently stalled