Hey there! My wife is a visual artist! She's currently looking for video game projects to work on. Here is her portfolio anivard.com. Let me know if you'd like to colab. I'll make intros.
Hi folks! I'm a full-stack senior software engineer looking for a part-time/full-time gig. With having over ten years of experience under my belt, I've been apart of successful startups as well as fortune 500 companies.
I’ll finish any project end-to-end, whether the codebase is ugly, broken, nonexistent, 50 years old, written in an esoteric programming languages, or written in 0’s, and 1’s.
I have a thorough understanding of an application’s lifecycle: gathering requirements, converting and componentizing requirements to tasks, analyzing the validity of tasks, such as external dependencies and ordering, writing specifications for QA/QE to use and test against, deploying to a staging server for QA/QE, deploying to a staging server for production, deploying to the production server.
I'm well versed in both Scrum (/Agile) and Kanban methodologies and their workflows. I've done some consulting/coaching relating to communication, workflows, tooling, and planning technical and non-technical roadmaps.
I have a strong background in computer science and algorithms and will chew on anything thrown my way. I am by no means constrained to one title or role (backend, frontend, devops, api/database engineer)
Guys. This is my problem with reading white papers. People use notations and assumptions which I am not familiar with. Hence, I have to go decipher what people are trying to day. There needs to be a course for math notation. Is there a book or a online course I can take to familiarize myself with math as a language.