Chris Boyle is a pragmatic software developer with 16 years of commercial experience building reliable back-end systems and tooling in Java, Kotlin, Scala and C++, and a strong track record in maintenance-heavy product teams. Based in Oxford, he currently owns a server-side Java product converting XBRL to Excel/CSV/databases and has represented his company on the Table Linkbase standard working group, combining domain knowledge in financial reporting with hands-on engineering. His past roles include high-performance load‑balancing software and web UI work, and he contributes to open source—ranging from Perl backend fixes for Dreamwidth to an Android port of Simon Tatham’s Puzzles—showing both systems and mobile chops. Known for rapid delivery and pragmatic problem-solving, he also brings attention to interoperability and standards, having implemented a Kotlin microservice for Word table conversions.
16 years of coding experience
8 years of employment as a software developer
MEng, Computer Science, 2.i, MEng, Computer Science, 2.i at University of Warwick
Contributions:45 releases, 997 commits, 12 PRs in 13 years 4 months
Contributions summary:Chris primarily worked on enhancing the Android port of Simon Tatham's Puzzles, as evidenced by the commits related to the "range" puzzle, Android compatibility, and haptic feedback. They implemented features, translated code for Android, fixed UI-related issues, and added functionality such as a completion popup and improved keyboard controls. The commits also include updates to the build system, aiming for improved development and debugging workflows.
Contributions:18 commits, 15 PRs, 48 comments in 2 years 7 months
Contributions summary:Chris primarily contributed to the back-end logic of the Dreamwidth platform, specifically within the Perl codebase. Their work included bug fixes, such as addressing OpenID comment rejections and issues with untagging. They also implemented new features, notably warning users about comment blocking in QuickReply forms and ensuring security level respects. Furthermore, the user modified code related to email verification and moderation features.
perldreamwidth
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