Anyone in Cambridge need a programmer? I'll give you £500 if you can find me a job that I take.
CV at http://www.aspden.com
I make my usual promise, which I have paid out on several times:
If,
within the next six months, I take a job which lasts longer than one
month, and that is not obtained through an agency, then on the day the
first cheque from that job cashes, I'll give £500 to the person who
provided the crucial introduction.
If there are a
number of people involved somehow, then I'll apportion it fairly between
them. And if the timing conditions above are not quite met, or someone
points me at a shorter contract which the £500 penalty makes not worth
taking, then I'll do something fair and proportional anyway.
And
this offer applies even to personal friends, and to old contacts whom I
have not got round to calling yet, and to people who are themselves
offering work, because why wouldn't it?
And obviously
if I find one through my own efforts then I'll keep the money. But my
word is generally thought to be good, and I have made a public promise
on my own blog to this effect, so if I cheat you you can blacken my name
and ruin my reputation for honesty, which is worth much more to me than
£500.
And I also make the following boast:
I
know all styles of programming and many languages, and can use any
computer language you're likely to use as it was intended to be used.
I
have a particular facility with mathematical concepts and algorithms of
all kinds. I can become very interested in almost any problem which is
hard enough that I can't solve it easily.
I have a
deserved reputation for being able to produce heavily optimised, but
nevertheless bug-free and readable code, but I also know how to hack
together sloppy, bug-ridden prototypes, and I know which style is
appropriate when, and how to slide along the continuum between them.
I've
worked in telecoms, commercial research, banking, university research,
chip design, server virtualization, university teaching, sports physics,
a couple of startups, and occasionally completely alone.
I've
worked on many sizes of machine. I've written programs for tiny 8-bit
microcontrollers and gigantic servers, and once upon a time every IBM
machine in the Maths Department in Imperial College was running my
partial differential equation solvers in parallel in the background.
I'm
smart and I get things done. I'm confident enough in my own abilities
that if I can't do something I admit it and find someone who can.
I
know what it means to understand a thing, and I know when I know
something. If I understand a thing then I can usually find a way to
communicate it to other people. If other people understand a thing even
vaguely I can usually extract the ideas from them and work out which
bits make sense.
Wednesday, October 5, 2016
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