Archive for December, 2010

West Coast, The Saga Continues

Friday, December 31st, 2010

Like a growing number of other Hampshire grads, I ended up in Palo Alto.  After completing my Div III, a compiler/distribution system allowing legacy C code to leverage cluster resources, I moved to UMass for a little bit.  An internship with VMware distracted me from pursuing my masters/PhD program, though.

I’ve always had a passion for both low level systems issues and higher level distributed systems challenges – VMware has really let me explore both.  I’m one of the leads working on their vMotion feature, a technique for migrating a running virtual machine from one host in a cluster to a different physical host without VM downtime. I end up bouncing between ESX kernel and VMM (virtual machine monitor) development up to Virtual Center/DRS (distributed resource scheduler) work, playing with every layer of the virtualization stack.  Definitely rewarding stuff.

As much as I enjoy my work here on the west coast, I still find that I miss MA.  I’ve wandered back to Hampshire a few times since leaving, visiting friends and enjoying some real weather.  I’ll probably head back to that area sooner or later.

In the mean time, though, if anyone is looking for some fun systems work, please do get in touch with me.  I work with a variety of teams at VMware, most of which are hiring.  We are also constantly on the lookout for interns.

Now, back to enjoying my brief vacation!  Enjoy the New Year!

Greetings from Holden, MA

Wednesday, December 29th, 2010

Hi all,

I’m pleased to be able to write a short introductory post about myself and what I’ve been up to.  Where to begin?  My Div III was on Path Planning for Mobile Robotics.  After graduating, I became a software consultant for a number of years.  I made the move to management at TJX Companies and stayed on that path to my current employer, Fidelity Investments.

Being a Hampshire student, it’s not surprising that I feel a little out of place in the world of large, conservative corporations, but I’ve managed to find myself a very happy home.  I gave up managing large teams about 3 years ago and am now something of a corporate academic.  My role for the organization is to research and drive improvements in our software development processes.  That includes following industry trends, doing primary research within our organization, heavy involvement with statistics and regularly teaching classes on software measurement concepts, data presentation, etc.  Some of our research has proven interesting enough that I’m looking to publish it, so perhaps someday soon I’ll be back here writing about that.

In conjunction with software engineering, I’ve studied process improvement methodologies like Six Sigma and LEAN.  I blog regularly on the topic (shameless plug warning) of improving software processes by combining the two areas at my own little side business.

On a personal note, I married my best friend who I met at Hampshire all the way back in 1995.  We’ve been married about 6 years now and have two kids, a four year old and a 6 month old.  We still live close enough to the Pioneer Valley to make fairly regular trips out that way just to walk around Northampton and from time to time stop by and ring the Div III bell just because we can.  I love seeing how much campus has (and has not) changed since we were students there.

MA

Thursday, December 9th, 2010

Hello i3ci readers,

I am currently working out of MA at Hampshire, Umass, and Brandeis.

At Hampshire I am working with Lee’s group on the Clojure implementation of Push, Clojush. Thus far that involves the zip stack (see Zippers, trees), example problems, and some meta-GP/autoconstruction.

At UMass I am a visting student with the BINDS lab. My research at BINDS is on emotion, vision, and analog memory. The most recent work being on the emergent behavior and properties of agents that communicate emotional state.

I’m actually enrolled as a PhD student at Brandeis. I work with Jordan Pollack in the DEMO lab (BIG). My research includes neuronal imaging analysis, chemical computation, and evolutionary robotics. The neuronal imaging analysis is a collaboration with Yuhua Shang, Pengyu Hong, and Michael Rosbash. We are working on using the Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction as a substrate for computation (simulation and experimental) with Michael Heymann, and Seth Fraden. Finally, I am using breve to evolve constructable robots (and then construct them).

Kyle

Sentences from the West Coast

Thursday, December 9th, 2010

I, like DIllon below and several other Hampshire alumni, live in Palo Alto. After completing my Div III on Solving Email Overload in May 2009, I came out here to work for startups. I ended up at a 3-person startup called Threadbox as the second engineer. In July, 2010, we sold the company to Myspace, where I continue to work to this day on a secret product with the same team.

I have a lot of other projects that I’m working on in my own time. One of them is a real-time CRM system called Tattle.com. In my near future, I’ll probably be working on this idea or another one full time. If you’re interested in web analytics, CRM, small business software, or computer vision, and you’re an amazing web developer, please contact me.

Lastly, if you’re an aspiring entrepreneur or a programmer with entrepreneurial thoughts (I know you have them), you need to be here in Silicon Valley. Don’t be scared to make the move and work for a startup (or a big company for maybe a year, max) – everyone is hiring right now. This is still the place to be for technologists. Don’t go to Boston. If you need help finding a job out here, contact me and I can help you with that.

Vibhu
revolutions[at]gmail.com
@vibhu

Hey From DC!

Sunday, December 5th, 2010

Hello all.

Lee asked me to share a bit about what I’m doing on this new alum blog. So here goes.

I’m currently a research scientist on contract to NIST. I work with speaker and language recognition software. More specifically we design experiments and run technology evaluations that test other peoples systems. We also develop standards for biometric data.

I’m also a member of a hacker space in DC (HacDC). I helped start a study group there for NLP and AI called NARG. I’ve given a lot of talks on AI (many stolen from Lee’s AI courses), but right now NARG is currently working on setting up a sensor network in our hacker space.

When I start new interesting projects I’ll be sure and post them up here, but for now I’m done. If there are any Hampshire hackers are in the DC area, look me up.

B

Words from the west coast

Friday, December 3rd, 2010

This is Dillon Compton, writing at you from the west coast. Lee asked me about a month ago if I would like to author the first alumni post, and I’ve finally remembered at the same time as having the time and energy to write something.  I’ve been banging my head against the wall trying to think of something to write about, and have not had much luck. I apologize for the rambling below, but hope that it serves as an introduction to me. I’ll also share a few thoughts at a very high level about how Hampshire students (or at least me) have mapped our skills from Hampshire to the real world of corporate technology.

I graduated from Hampshire in Spring 2010 – my Div II was focused on Computer Science and Evolutionary Biology, and my Div III focused on tech entrepreneurship and smartphone software development. I’m intensely interested in how you can change the world with technology, and think that the newest era of ‘smartphones’ represent a strikingly new method of data consumption, and more importantly democratizes the production and dissemination of information.

I’m currently living in Palo Alto, CA and working at Intuit – the makers of TurboTax, Quicken, Quickbooks, Quickbooks Online, Homestead, Mint, etc… The job is good, usually interesting, and surprisingly engaging, but still leaves the ‘Hampshire Student’ in me mostly unfulfilled.

The longer I live in Palo Alto, the more connections to the Hampshire community I discover within this silicon-valley small-world of technology. Marketers, Engineers, Designers, and CEOs for tech companies large and small are all represented in the growing Silicon Valley Hampshire community. This was a surprise at first because I did not expect many Hampshire students to graduate, leave the pioneer valley, and head to the silicon valley to make it big in the world of tech corporations… but we are here, and most of us seem to be enjoying it. There is a culture out here that encourages people to always drive for something new – new technology, new ideas, new processes – that I think appeals to the Hampshire in me. It’s not about innovation for the sake of innovation, it seems like everyone I talk to wants to change the world in their own way.

Within my day job I find that the inherent interdisciplinary nature of a Hampshire education has prepared me for corporate america in many unexpected ways. Creating and delivering compelling presentations, drawing connections between apparently disparate subjects or points, negotiating workloads and expectations, establishing subject expertise, self-educating, and crafting well-written emails and proposals are just a few of the skills that I acquired at Hampshire and have used at Intuit so far. I’ve also found that the drive Hampshire fostered in me, to create new, applicable ‘things’  has served me incredibly well so far. Mostly due to this drive I’ve been handed the reigns on several side projects, and am in my “10% Unstructured time” (like google’s 20% flex time) running project and product management for a mobile time-tracking product with 10,000 customers.

I’ve got to sign off for now, but will try to post again in the near future with some details on a few side projects that I am pursuing. Much like my days at Hampshire, it seems that in the real world doing the ‘expected’ work is not sufficient to keep me engaged and I keep several side projects in progress at any given time.