| 2004 |
Development in PHP - Still working with PHP 4 and haven't had much chance to look at PHP 5 yet. Using XML in a number of areas.
Writing - Process Mapping, Team Activities and Organisation articles - and documentation tasks. |
2003


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Since
the beginning of June 2003 I have concentrated on web projects
and teaching.
Alongside
development projects, I'm now on a teacher training course
(Post-16 Teaching Certificate, started in September 2003)
My intention is to do more teaching and training than in
the past, hence the move towards a better knowledge of how
to do it effectively.
Although
it seems that everyone and their dog are now offering web
site creation services commercially, my interest centres
on interactive sites and their integration with back-end
applications and databases: Making sites that are functional
and cost-effective rather than just sitting there and looking
good.
Being
free of a single large organisation has given me the freedom
to choose; selecting development that interests me and getting
much more experience of PHP applications and .NET.
I
left Alcan at the
end of May 2003.
Until
then I had responsibility for managing and developing
business information applications for Alcan Packaging in
the UK and Ireland.
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These
applications included business reporting and document technology.
Working with key members of the business and with technical
innovators, this position required a good balance of technical
knowledge and development skills with business knowledge and
strategic awareness.
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In
January 2003 I became a member of the Institute of Scientific
and Technical Communicators (ISTC).
From
around the same time, at the start of 2003, I used Visual Studio .NET
to develop applications using C# and, at the same time, was writing documentation for developers who use the .NET
development environment.
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2002

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Lawson
Mardon Packaging is now part of the Alcan Packaging group. The
Lawson Mardon name disappeared just before Christmas 2002, having
previously (but briefly) been Alcan Packaging Lawson Mardon.
Before the merger with Alcan, the company was part of algroup,
and known as algroup lawson mardon (all lower case, as per the
logo shown here). When I first joined the company, it was known
as LMG (or Lawson Mardon Group). |
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I
developed and maintained four web sites for Alcan - One
embedded with Cognos IWR. Otherwise, web site content was
mostly created out of ERP systems through FormScape. To the best of my knowledge these
sites are still operational: IIS on Windows servers using ASP as the preferred
server technology. I managed the original site design and realisation using
Macromedia Dreamweaver MX.
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During
2002 I was introduced to RedHat Linux, having installed and
documented RedHat Linux 7 servers. This was a springboard to
using open-source software for web sites. These now include
some very cost-effective sites using MySQL and PHP with Apache
web server.
Using
MySQL and PHP has also shown up the benefits of sites that
can be served unmodified from Apache on Linux as well as
from IIS, on Windows servers.
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Alcan
Packaging's ERP platform is SAP R/3 on ORACLE with stock control
and warehousing systems using ATMS, integrated to SAP.
My
work for Alcan Packaging included development of both electronic
and paper documents - from pallet labels and packing slips
through to delivery notes and sales invoices - together with
the deployment of innovative print, publishing and management
technologies.
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2001

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FormScape
has been used for the development of documents for paper, the
workstation and the web, using Eyes and Hands for OCR of incoming
documents.
I
was trained in FormScape in early 2001, taking development
responsibility for UK sites in February 2001. I managed all
of Lawson Mardon's FormScape implementations from the summer
of 2001, implementing the transition in document standards
from algroup to Alcan format.
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During
the twelve months from September 2001, I worked with an Applications
Manager to set up on-line training and help resources for SAP
and ATMS Warehousing Systems using OnDemand from Global Knowledge.
These help and training modules include how-to lessons,
online help and interactive assistance in completing specific
tasks, allowing users to see it, try it, do it.
In
October 2001, following training and workshop sessions, I
received accreditation from DACG in authoring user help and
training material using OnDemand.
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In
March 2001 my article Displaying Status Messages from CognosScript appeared
in SupportLink Magazine. An introductory item, Creating
XML documents from MV data appeared in the summer issue
of MultiValue News.
During
2001 I registered the domain chrispearson.org and started
posting to http://www.chrispearson.org, to collect and present
ideas, techniques and examples and to share some experiences
of using IT to improve business. I started out using FrontPage
98 and have since migrated through Dreamweaver 4 to Dreamweaver
MX, which I also use professionally.
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2000



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I
have designed and developed systems using Cognos BI products
integrating ORACLE and PICK/Universe data sources into a single,
web-based business information resource, serving eleven business
areas on seven sites and field sales personnel.
I
started using Cognos products in late 1999 and achieved Cognos
Certified Professional status for Release 5 in March 2000.
I
began using Adobe Acrobat to distill documents to PDF, a
process that has become a mainstay of my personal strategy
for document distribution across all the different platforms
available. Starting with Acrobat 4 and later upgrading to
release 5.
In
the summer of 2000 MultiValue News carried my article Sending
email from a MV application, discussing how to integrate
PICK-like data sources with Microsoft Excel and Outlook,
providing automated email functionality.
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1999


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Between
May 1996 and June 1999 I worked as Business Analyst on a major
business change project known as Project Pegasus,
reviewing business processes, defining requirements and evaluating
systems.
As
a member of the BPR core team on Project Pegasus, I edited
and published the change project's newspaper, On the
Wing. After creating print-ready, postscript documents
using Microsoft Publisher 98, I worked with a digital print
shop to produce the hard copy. A version of the paper was
also posted to an intranet site, managed using FrontPage
98.
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I
created presentations using Microsoft PowerPoint and was trained
in using Visio for realising diagrams and organisational charts.
I started using Visio Version 4 (from Visio International)
and have stayed with the software through its assimilation
into Microsoft's Office suite, now using Visio 2000.
As
part of the business process redesign, I took responsibility
for forecasting, sales order and master planning processes.
I facilitated the Sales and Operations Planning process teams.
I researched and drafted the Sales and Operations Planning
process manuals, developed the training courses for sales
personnel and wrote the users' manual for the Forecasting
Workbench used by sales reps. Forecasting used Mercia Lincs
software (Mercia Software is now part of Finmatica)
On
the technical side I developed interfaces between forecasting
workbench systems, SAP R/3 and disparate legacy systems.
I
created then contributed to the IPS web site,
providing assistance and training for the ex-colleagues who
had formed Integrated Process Solutions at the end of 1998.
I handed the site over to be managed by the company, in-house
during 2000.
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1996

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Before
May 1996, as Systems Manager with LMG, I had operational and
development responsibility for Lawson Mardon's York production
plant and for Lawson Mardon Pre-Press Ltd., also in York. I
managed and participated in small teams brought together to
develop and deliver specific business solutions.
I
was responsible for training users in Microsoft Office products
- The company migrated from WordPerfect and Lotus 1-2-3 to
Microsoft Word and Excel in 1993. This experience provided
me with an in-depth knowledge of Microsoft Office applications
under Windows 3.x, a knowledge which I have continued and extended
through 9x releases to Office 2000, taking in Windows 95, 98,
NT and 2000.
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1992
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Initially
a manufacturing systems consultant in the PICK market during
1991, I later worked with NHS Executive on building schemes
management systems - what became the Building Schemes Costing,
Estimating and Management Enquiry System: Building SCEMES.
The package was developed in SB+ for a Pick platform. Most
of those we sold were on R83 Pick, between two and eight users.
As
well as working on developing Datamore's Building SCEMES
package, I created training material for users and delivered
courses to Northwest Regional Health Authority and to district
health authority personnel in Stockport, Blackburn, Preston
and Bolton.
I
wrote the user and implementation guides shipped with the
application. I also wrote the system documentation for supporting
the package when the product was sold on to Apex Systems
in early 1992. I continued to deliver occasional training
courses under the Apex banner until 1993.
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1991

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Working
as a Freelance Systems Developer, contracts with three manufacturing
companies - Royal Ordnance Factory at Chorley, Lawson Mardon
Group at several locations and Brett Martin - combining systems
specification and design with development in RPL and DataBASIC,
training and rollout.
I
worked on sales, production and financial systems and integrating
them with desktop applications.
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1989

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Working
for McDonnell Douglas I developed operating system features
for Reality: Coding in assembler, PROC, RPL and DataBASIC.
I
benefited from attending a number of McDonnell Douglas's
public courses.
Each
project began with a development phase followed by producing
a package consisting deployment media, technical specification
and deployment documentation, together with a user guide.
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I
worked in a software house, developing and implementing medical
laboratory systems, including DataPath. I supported 4 sites,
North London and West Yorkshire in the UK, St Hellier in Jersey
and, working with Oman Computer Services, Muscat in Oman.
I
worked with training and documentation specialists on user
documentation for DataPath, taking the photographs - including
screen shots from green-screen terminals - as well as contributing
to the text.
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1984
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My
introduction to working freelance. |
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I
spent a short period as as freelance analyst/programmer, designing
and writing software to clients' requirements using Forth and
assembler on Motorola hardware and, on Apple II, BASIC.
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1983

|
During
1983 I had an article explaining the science behind allergy
screening published in Family magazine. The following
January a second piece appeared on the treatment of common
allergies.
|
| 1982 |
In
September 1982 I moved from the NHS into the private health
sector, working for AMI (UK). I set up the nuclear assay laboratory
at the Alexandra Hospital and, using Phadebas radio-assay products,
began allergy screening for AMI.
Having
done increasingly more programming during the couple of years
before leaving the NHS I began some serious software development
for the pathology department at the Alexandra Hospital.
I
ran some introductory courses for staff at the Alexandra,
called Under the bonnet of your computer, which
ran on into the new year as the first IBM PCs were brought
in at the beginning of 1983.
|
| 1980 |
Medical
Laboratory Scientific Officer
HNC
Medical Laboratory Sciences: Clinical Chemistry
|
| 1978 |
ONC
Sciences: Medical Laboratory Technology |
| 1974 |
Technical
Assistant in an electronics prototyping laboratory |
| 1973 |
Junior
Medical Laboratory Technician |
1971
 |
Left
Gravesend School for Boys after O-levels |