I don't trust technology. Sure, it's great for sharing cat photos or defacing Wikipedia or porn, but every day there's some new innovation that delegates another human task to an unthinking machine. Unthinking - for now... - Stephen Colbert (more CuteQuotes)
It's fun to search for your name on the Web. Tim Berners-Lee calls this "vanity
surfing." TobyVanitySurf
My Christmas list: TobyXmasList2007.
I volunteer some of my free time to the GNU Project. I'm a Volunteer Coordinator, which means that I try to help people who are helping the GNU project. If you don't know about Free Software I'd strongly recommend that you check out their web site. I don't have a lot of time to give them, but I'm glad to help.
Given that I've had a little time on my hands I've been playing around with
application development technologies. The combination
of databases, scripting languages, and Web user interfaces is
incredibly powerful! If you haven't played around with
perl or python
then you owe it to yourself to find the time to do so.
I've decided that my days of playing LP records are just about over.
OTOH, I've got lots of cool (and not so cool) music on LpRecords. I'm currently at the
point where I can play my records from work, which is fun. If only there
were cheap broadband wireless...
Work
Here's my (stale) resume, my resume in PDF format
and an informal resume (actually an email that I
wrote to a friend). Note to recruiters: the online copy of my resume at this site is authoritative. Please do not ask me to send you a copy in Word format.
At work I'm a software architect and developer specializing in the design and development of large-scale financial systems written in Java, although I've also built ASP/VBScript systems, and done lots of work in C. I work for Reva Systems, a startup building RFID infrastructure.
Before that I bounced around for a while, doing software architecture and development consulting.
Before that I was the CTO of a small software company in Kendall Square called Black Ink Systems. It was a fun place to work; building real-time financial analytics software for communications carriers. My job was to design things, write good code, and in general try to share some of my experience with the development team.
Before Black Ink I was the CTO and co-founder of a software startup called SaltFire which built
financial transaction processing infrastructure for communications carriers. Starting a company was a very intense experience and while the company wasn't successful I'm glad that I took the leap. I learned a lot and met some very cool people.
Before SaltFire I worked for
Kenan Systems
as a director in the software development group, at various times
in charge of architecture,
development, and performance groups (even the IT group for a while). We were a wild little
independent software
company until the founder got greedy and sold out to
Lucent
in early '99. "Welcome to the Bell System, employee number 156,892.
Please see the nurse for your implant." Working for the phone company (or at least one of the fragments of it) was interesting but it reinforced my belief that small companies are where it's at. Given that there's really no better job security at a place like Lucent than at a startup there's not a lot to recommend working there.
Before that I lived in Rhode Island and worked for GTECH. The technology
is interesting and the people are great but after the founders left
there were too many DilbertStories, so I moved back home
to Boston.
If you have comments or suggestions, please email me at toby@caboteria.org. I love to get non-SPAM email.