This is a narrative of my professional life. If this is too long for your attention-deprived mind, please visit my Linked In profile; but I am so very much more than my resume. Follow me on Twitter but be warned, I tweet about a many different things, not just technology.

Last Updated: 2022-02-13T01:05:00

Shadowboxes: The Beginning

I've been a developer for more than 20 years. After months of stealing computer time at a local college to train myself in Macromedia Director, I was brought on to an interactive media team at IBM's Eduquest to work on a children's interactive CD-ROM story book based on Laura L. Seeley's The Book of Shadowboxes: A Story of the ABC's. This valuable experience lead me to becoming Technical Director of the Window 3.1 version of Shadowboxes as well as for The 1994 IBM Interactive Annual Report. The annual report project was so massive that nearly killed me.

After a brief stay at the Betty Ford Clinic for Interactive Developers I entered the wild world of freelancing. I was contracted to work for agencies and companies large and small including IBM (of course), UPS, Home Depot, and the CDC.

The Atlanta Interactive Media Community

At this point I took the opportunity to lift my head and take a look around at the Atlanta development community. It basically didn't exist. New companies were popping up everywhere, new interactive departments inside large corporations were forming. The Web was taking off in a big way. A very big way. But no one knew each other. There was so much work, companies weren't even aware of other competing companies down the street.

With a lot of assistance and insistence from friends, we put together a party at a studio which volunteered as host and invited the entire disconnected community. It was huge. Everyone came. Connections were made. People were hired. Companies were engaged. It was amazing. I truly enjoyed being able to help people get work and help people find workers.

Poorly Laid Plans

Later, while working with a company called Caribiner I met some gentlemen who shared the same views about creative and technical development as I. We decided to create a start-up. It was a disaster. Partially planning, partially timing, but completely disastrous.

Then came 911 and everything else fell apart.

In 2002, I joined Realm Communications (now Realm Integrated Marketing) as their Technical Director working on CD-ROM and Web projects using Macromedia Director and Macromedia Flash.

Evangelist at Roundbox

In 2004 I began working with Roundbox Media as their Director of Multimedia Services. Roundbox was --- I use the past tense, as the company no longer exists --- a company that worked with clients in the educational field. We worked on various projects related to student assessments. At the same time I had taken over the management of the Atlanta Macromedia User Group (later to evolved as the Adobe User Group of Atlanta) as well as presenting at local user groups and conferences. I was building a name for myself in the rich Internet application space.

Roundbox Media grew into Roundbox Global and the management team decided to create a new position for me as Rich Internet Application Evangelist. Basically, I was doing all the things I was already doing, but now I could do them during the workday without making any project managers crazy. We moved into a new office space which had a huge meeting area. We could easily host meeting for 200 people. It was a very supportive environment for me and my community.

Continuing with Education Companies

After Roundbox Global was sold, I moved on to Measured Progress, another education company, as an Enterprise Architect. I worked on one large project which assisted teachers with creating student assessment questions. Later I assisted the Measured Progress UX team with creating prototypes for user testing, something I completely enjoyed.

I was assigned to move to Boston and work at a company Measured Progress had just purchased. I made plans, handed off all of my community responsibilities, and prepared to leave Atlanta. But the plan didn't pan out. Having lived in The South my entire life I was happy I didn't have to find out what it was like living where Winter was a serious matter.

Freelancing and Re-educating

I've worked as a freelancer since leaving Measured Progress in 2012. I've especially enjoyed working with Digital Primates on a small Angular application and a massively huge Flex/Java application as well as working with Simb & Company on a few Angular micro sites. And in my spare time I've learned. And learned.

Joining RevUnit

In October of 2016, I took a contract with RevUnit, a company based in Bentonville, Arkansas (with a new office in Las Vegas). They have me working on Ionic 3 mobile applications and Angular 4 Web applications with a really talented team. Little did I know how much I would enjoy working with list lively bunch.

In May of 2019, I was convinced that RevUnit was the place for me. It had all the things I wanted: challenging work, talented and fun coworkers, and a great salary/benefits package.

The RevUnit client I primarily worked with was Walmart, a staple client for technology companies in Northwest Arkansas. I was part of a team that assisted Walmart with applications for internal messaging, and a project that assisted in the organization and coordination of the Walmart buying process.

But the real reason I took a full time position at RevUnit was that they were giving me the opportunity to shepherd their technology staff by providing guidance and training. I established new rituals, events, and practices in the support of the technical staff's health and growth. I felt strongly that I'd found a new area of expertise and was very happy.

My End at RevUnit

Unfortunately, RevUnit's sales pipeline dried up at the end of 2019, which led to a series of layoffs. I was, of course, one of those people who were released. It was an emotional time for me. I was loving what I was doing and doing it very well.

Then came the COVID-19 pandemic, which made everything difficult. 2020 shaped up to be challenging.

New Position at J. B. Hunt (Current)

After a few months of spending my time unemployed catching up on my own growth, In the summer of 2020, I was contacted about coming to work at J. B. Hunt. J. B. Hunt is a Fortune 500 company in the transportation industry located in Northwest Arkansas. While I am hoping to make the kind of impact on the J. B. Hunt culture as I did at RevUnit, at this time I am working as a Senior Software Engineer working on an internal application for organizing the schedules of their drivers.