Techcareers - IT Jobs and Engineering Jobs
IT Jobs, Engineering Jobs and Career Resources for IT and Engineering Professionals
Post Jobs Now
Employer Home
Contact Us
  Home » News & Features » All Features » Career Profile: From Teacher To Developer
Most Recent Features
 

Career Profile: From Teacher To Developer


By Charles Babcock | 05/15/2006 - 9:00 AM EST - Courtesy of InformationWeek

Print this page | Email this article | Comment on this article | Email Editors | Request Reprint

Brian McCallister started writing software as a kid, but his first job was teaching English. Then the married 31-year-old began what he calls his "sideways transition" into software development by taking a job writing technical documentation. He began to teach himself scripting languages like Perl and then Java, and eventually became a Java consultant.

McCallister is committed to the open source community and its process for developing software. He moves from one Apache Software Foundation project to another. Over several years, he's become a recognized contributor wherever he shows up. After writing code for the Object/Relational Bridge and Jakarta, he's now contributing to ActiveMQ, an open source messaging service.

He earns a paycheck as a software architect for Ning.com, a startup that's proposing to make it easy to construct social applications on the Web. But he spends his evenings and weekends creating open source code, like a protocol for ActiveMQ that lets it send and receive messages from Ruby, a new scripting language that's being used in a framework, Ruby on Rails, for creating quick Web applications.

McCallister says one of the greatest honors of his life was being one of 30 people elected last year as a member of the Apache Software Foundation. He now serves on the Project Management Committee for the DB Project.

Return to main story, Open Source Software: Who Gives And Who Takes








Featured Companies