Joshua Juran's Résumé
Objective
I'm seeking a position as a senior software developer, bringing to bear my experience with many languages, tools, and techniques, making a decisive contribution to a challenging project.
I'm especially interested in generic programming in C++, Perl scripting, Mac OS and UNIX environments, and agile development practices.
Technical Areas
Problem Domains
- Network programming (HTTP, SMTP, POP3)
- Dynamic, interactive hypertext (client-, server-side Web scripting)
- Object modeling and scriptability (Apple Event Object Model)
- Realtime graphics display (screen-synchronized drawing)
- 3D graphics (shaded software rendering)
- Systems programming (Mac OS drivers and system patches)
- Operating system design (POSIX layer for Mac OS)
- Cryptography (MD5, SSL)
- Financial transactions (credit card authorization)
- Automated software publishing (build process and disc image production)
Programming Styles
- Object-oriented programming (16 years, heavy use)
- Generic programming (6 years, heavy use)
- Functional programming (4 years, heavy use)
- Threaded programming (4 years, heavy use)
- Declarative programming (4 years, moderate use)
Programming and Scripting Languages
- C++ (11 years, heavy use)
- C (13 years, heavy use)
- Perl 5 (6 years, heavy use)
- JavaScript (2 years, moderate use)
- Motorola 68K assembler (2 years, moderate use)
- PowerPC assembler (1 year, light use)
- Bourne shell, make, m4, sed (7 years, moderate use)
- SQL (1 year, heavy use)
- PHP (1 year, heavy use)
- AppleScript, HyperTalk (5 years, moderate use)
- Common LISP, Scheme (2 years, moderate use)
- Pascal, Object Pascal (6 years, heavy use)
Structural Languages
- HTML (10 years, heavy use)
- XML (1 year, light use)
Application Programming Interfaces and Frameworks
- Web CGI (3 years, heavy use)
- Perl DBI (1 year, heavy use)
- Level 1 DOM (1 year, light use)
- Macintosh Toolbox, Carbon (17 years, heavy use)
- Standard C++ library, STL (6 years, heavy use)
- Berkeley sockets (7 years, heavy use, implementation)
- POSIX (4 years, heavy use, implementation)
- OpenSSL (1 year, light use)
Development Tools
- GNU C/C++, CVS, make (7 years, heavy use)
- git (1 year, light use)
- Metrowerks CodeWarrior (13 years, heavy use)
- Xcode / ProjectBuilder (2 years, heavy use)
- Apple's MPW (4 years, moderate use)
Production Tools
- Apache/mod_perl (1 year, heavy use)
- MySQL (1 year, heavy use)
- phpMyAdmin (1 year, moderate use)
Operating Systems
- Mac OS X (4 years, heavy use)
- Mac OS (20 years, heavy use)
- Linux (11 years, moderate use)
Work Experience
Employee of Adobe (Seattle, WA)
July 2007 - present
Adobe's Photoshop Express is a community-oriented Web application. On the storage cluster team, I redesigned and reimplemented file uploads to avoid performance bottlenecks and refactored the build scripts. Currently I'm working on redundancy.
Employee of Microsoft (Redmond, WA)
March 2006 - July 2007
I worked on core aspects of Microsoft Office for Mac OS. I fixed bugs in the Compatibility Report module, ported the Test Drive (demo) timeout and tamper-detection code to the Intel architecture, and implemented changes to the Formatting Palette, including the ability to specify an alternate button shape (used for groups of buttons clustered together with the edges rounded) which was reused after the fact by another developer for a different feature.
In addition, I discovered and fixed latent bugs exposed by compiler warnings and made various improvements to the build infrastructure.
Freelance Software Developer
August 2003 - present
MacAuthorize is a credit card processing application which, having been discontinued by the publisher, has never been revised to run natively on Mac OS X, and therefore runs in the Classic compatibility environment, which doesn't provide access to the computer's internal modem. I devised and implemented Port XTender, a software solution that enables MacAuthorize to use the internal modem as it did in Mac OS 9. Writing a device driver was required. (Xcode, CodeWarrior)
Independent Consultant to Macquarie University (Sydney, Australia)
August 2003 - January 2005
I ported PsyScript (a scriptable application engine for administering cognitive psychology experiments) from C to C++, from Mac OS 9 to Mac OS X, and from CodeWarrior to gcc (retaining backward compatibility with CodeWarrior and Mac OS 9).
Senior Developer at LEROS Technologies (Fairfax, VA)
July - December 2002
City Sprinter is a distributed application for running a courier business written in Object Pascal for Mac OS. The included modules for communicating over several TCP-based protocols were severely broken when I began working as the sole maintainer. I eliminated crashes, data corruption, and memory leaks in general and rewrote the networking code to avoid race conditions. (CodeWarrior)
Senior Programmer/Analyst (contractor) at the National Center for Biotechnology Information
March 2001 - January 2002
I was responsible for the Mac support of NCBI's Bioinformatics C Toolkit. Most of the toolkit was platform-independent; the VIBRANT application framework was not, and I ported the VIBRANT Mac code to the Carbon API required by Mac OS X.
NCBI's Mac build system used AppleScript to create CodeWarrior project files. I refactored the build scripts to eliminate redundant code and support multiple targets.
Independent Consultant to Targa Partners (Baltimore, MD)
July 2000
A stock charting application uses a perpetually imminent time bomb as a means of access control (and ongoing revenue), but the vendor withdrew support and discontinued updates. I wrote a program to patch the system such that the time appeared never to advance past the allowed threshhold. (Mac, C)
Contractor to Buttonwood Internet (Frederick, MD)
January - June 2000
The ORBS open relay blacklisting service sent us an automated message warning that our mail server had tested positive as an open relay and would be listed as such in one week. I implemented a POP-before-SMTP solution and closed the relay before the deadline. (Linux, sendmail, Perl)
I was selected to complete the back-end of a customer Web site project after a key project member left the company. I developed Perl libraries to conduct credit card transactions through Authorize.net and the site went public on time. (Linux, Perl, CGI, HTML)
Contractor to The Learning Company (School division) (Baltimore, MD)
December 1998 - December 1999
After a manual CD-ROM imaging process resulted in repeated incorrect images, a plan was made to develop an in-house mastering utility to automate the process given a single configuration file per disc. In addition to being the sole developer on the project, I also produced the design and documentation and participated in requirements analysis. (Perl, AppleScript, DOS batch)
I was asked to help eliminate a "showstopper" bug in an unrelated project, which turned out to be caused by a system software flaw. Despite there being no defect in the application code to correct, I successfully modified the code to avoid the bug. (Mac, C/C++, CodeWarrior)
Independent Consultant
October 1997 - November 1998
Various odd jobs including diagnosing and eliminating hardware and software problems, and upgrading hardware and software.
Employee of and Consultant to STR, L.L.C. (Fairfax, VA)
March 1994 - September 1997
Hired as a Programmer/Analyst (initially working on a battle simulator front-end in Excel, and later porting code between C and Pascal), I in addition evolved to system and network administrator. I diagnosed and fixed hardware and software problems, which included replacing bad cards and (re)installing system software, both Mac OS and Windows. I obviated the need for a $2800 NetWare license upgrade by writing scripts that dynamically connected to and disconnected from the server as necessary, so idle machines wouldn't occupy license slots.
I introduced the company to the Internet in general, configured a DNS server (BIND) to provide both local name service for our internal network and cached resolution for the Internet, and in a single day implemented unified intra-office and Internet email for each employee, using Internet standard software (SMTP/POP3).
Open Source Collaboration
Nitrogen
A thin but rich, type-safe, exception-safe C++ wrapper for the Carbon API of Mac OS 9 and X, Nitrogen allows design-by-contract, reduces code size (typically) by more than half, and makes certain classes of errors impossible to make. My contributions to date include support for the Thread Manager and Apple events (among others), and I'm solely responsible for supporting classic Mac OS. I'm now the project maintainer.
Linux/m68k
Penguin is a Mac OS application which loads and executes the Linux kernel. I was the second developer to work on Penguin, and produced the first usable release. (Mac, C)
Self-founded
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POSeven:
POSeven is a C++ wrapper for the POSIX API inspired by Nitrogen and delivering the same benefits. -
A-line:
A parallel-processing, multi-project software build tool without the problems of recursive make. It supports the gamut from Mac OS X application bundles to 68K code resources as well as general Unix executables (e.g. on Linux). It currently runs on three architectures, three operating systems, and two toolchains. -
Genie/Lamp:
A POSIX-like runtime environment for classic Mac OS (much like Cygwin). It supports Unix filing, signals, sockets, vfork(), and virtual filesystems like /proc, and includes perl. It runs on both 68K and PowerPC. -
Pedestal:
Originally intended to implement Apple's Human Interface Guidelines, this Mac application framework has become a testing ground for some of Jef Raskin's ideas outlined in The Humane Interface, such as an incremental search quasimode. -
Vertice:
A sample Pedestal application which is also a software 3D renderer with shading.