My name is Cohan Sujay. I started writing programs when dinosaurs roamed the earth among BBC Micros and IBM 186s. That was a long time ago.
I am currently working on a collaboration tool that supports planning games in a distributed team
AgilePlace available to the public at
http://www.tryxp.org . You can get an account, share your project with other team members, and collaborate on the project with them using online planning games!
First major project: developing control system software for telescopes. Keep your eyes on the stars. You'll develop a great posture.
Short stints: PSI and Sun.
Internships:
VisualAgeSmalltalk country club, built a
SmalltalkLanguage JSP Engine, worked on session management and failover. The JSP Engine used to be downloadable from this page
http://www.whysmalltalk.com/developmentandtools/index.htm#stjsp
Testing: Tested software for internal tools at IBM and worked on an agile test process
AgileBridges which is more fun than most other test processes I know.
I think
KentBeck came up with
ExtremeProgramming by applying principles from Japanese manufacturing concepts to software engineering. We applied the same principles to testing in the above process.
I work at OTI Labs, IBM, Raleigh. We build UI libs for PDAs.
My cyberhome is at
http://www.floranta.com/oriondown, complete with a cyberpet (visit
http://splotch.sourceforge.net if you want the code). I just started a blog at
http://cohan.blog-city.com.
I draw cartoons about programmers in my spare time:
http://www.floranta.com ... oopssie! That is now my pet web-project, aka.,
http://www.thiscafe.com
I've also worked on Eclipse plugins for concurrent testing, static analysis tools, code generators, and on collaboration tools (see
http://floranta.sourceforge.net).
I'm currently looking for metaphors for programming that may have applications in training and research.
A doctor's prescription is a device to send people where they don't want to go.
The lucky ones are ...
JeffCanna and
BillKrebs ! ...
What's special about these people? Oh, nothing! Except that they leave their e-mail addresses on the
WikiWikiWeb for spammers to pick up! :)
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