After freelancing for a few years, I started as a frontend developer at Intergen where I met BetterComp’s CTO, Derek Watson. I joined him on a few endeavors, first writing backend code and then into systems & network programming. We were later acquired and after a few years apart, I rejoined Derek and his team to help scale BetterComp.
I work with the platforms team, building and maintaining the infrastructure and workflows that bring BetterComp to life.
Picking one favorite thing about the job is tough, because I cannot decide between the work I do and the people I do it with.
On the weekend I will either be in the garden, apiary, kitchen, workshop, playing music, coding, or off hiking for hours. My kids, whom I affectionately call the “Child Labor Force” are incredible little helpers.
My favorite project has been the release of BetterComp v2.0 which brought several large initiatives together, delivering an enormous amount of capability to all aspects of the system. It was special because given the size of the release, everything (...almost!) worked the first time and for what little was left, the team banded together to get things up and running quickly.
Get really good at the command line: add as many commands to your CLI belt as you can, and then KEEP getting good at them. There is so much to learn and it will take years, but just like watching a master woodworker, there is something so very satisfying and inspiring witnessing a developer deeply proficient in their craft.
Two pieces of advice that have made an impact stick out: “Good programmers think about code. Great programmers think about data structures, their relationships, and their algorithms.” and, regarding building distributed systems, “EVERYTHING fails.”
During the Mandatory Week of Fun Week (MWOFW) while at Riverbed, I entered a 4-person eating relay challenge as a team of one. I came in second place, by a matter of seconds. I have not yet recovered from this humiliating defeat.
I’m a self taught pianist but I can’t read music. I learned “Revolutionary Etude” by listening to 100 different Spotify recordings of it on repeat for about 4 weeks, trying to follow the sheet music while on the train. I spent two weeks imagining what fingers I would use to push those notes on the piano, then was able to play the song on the piano in two days. I don’t do this very often.
My uncle, who passed not long ago. I did not get the chance to say goodbye. I wouldn’t do any talking - he had all the wisdom in the world and I would’ve listened to him for years.
I would probably go at least 60 million years in the future. I’m really curious about what the trees are going to look like.