If you're pitching something, I'm not buying and not interested. I have nothing to do with staffing, outsourcing, partnering, or purchasing, so don't bother. As well if you're pitching cryptocurrencies, silly NFTs such as BAYC, I'm not interested in the least! I should also make it clear, I'm not currently looking for a new position. I want to make it even more clear that I'm a "Show Me" kind of guy. You want to convince me of something, show me the beef. Boasts and platitudes are cheap. Real substance takes effort.I'm currently the Chief Architect for a family of transaction processing products at Oracle including the Oracle Tuxedo product family, Oracle Blockchain Platform, and the new Oracle Transaction Manager for Microservices (MicroTx). My main areas of focus are on security, privacy, confidentiality, performance, and scalability. My job is to provide the technical strategy for these products to ensure they meet customer requirements.Prior to being acquired by Oracle, I was Chief Architect for BEA Tuxedo at BEA Systems, Inc. While at BEA Systems, I was responsible for defining the technical strategy and direction for the Tuxedo product family. I developed the Tuxedo Control for WebLogic Workshop that greatly simplified the usage of Tuxedo services from Workshop based applications. I also received two patents for methods allowing design patterns in a UML modeling tool to control the generation of software artifacts.During my more than 40 years of software architecture and development experience, I have worked on a wide range of software systems and technology. At Science Applications International I worked on microcoded plasma display systems and command, control, and communication systems for naval applications. As a senior software consultant at Digital Equipment Corporation, I was the New York Area Regional Tools Consultant and also helped develop a multi-language multi-threaded distributed object oriented runtime environment with concurrent garbage collection.
Listed skills include Distributed Systems, Software Development, Middleware, Enterprise Software, and 43 others.