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BRIAN J.

HARDOCK
325 Union Avenue Campbell, CA 95008 EDUCATION The Pennsylvania State University Bachelor of Science: Computer Science Bachelor of Science: Mathematics Email: brianh1729@gmail.com Phone: (570) 617-3362 University Park, PA July 2009-August 2013 GPA: 3.26

WORK/RELATED EXPERIENCE Cisco Systems, Inc.: San Jose, CA Software Engineer I September 2013-Present Participated in the development of software for the Cisco Cloud Services Router (CSR) Implemented RESTful APIs in Python to handle HTTP requests to configure the CSR Debugged and tested the manageability software running within a Linux container embedded in the Cloud Services Router Debugged and tested a script to bootstrap the Cloud Services Router in an Amazon Machine Image on Amazon Web Services Participated in the Agile SCRUM software development process Cisco Systems, Inc.: San Jose, CA Software Engineering Intern May 2012-August 2012 Worked within SRTG business unit for the Canis-NG development team Gained familiarity with IOS-XE based ASR1K and ISR-G3 routers. Learned routing and switching concepts, OSI model, and TCP/IP protocols Developed a tool which takes a running configuration from IOS based ISR-G2 routers as input: o Parses the layer 2 switching configuration, o Generates the Ethernet Virtual Circuits (EVC) and Ethernet Flow Point (EFP) configuration for ISR-G3 routers running IOS-XE Worked on verification scenarios for EVC/EFP and configuring BDI (Bridge Domain Interfaces) by deploying the tool generated configuration in the ISR-G3 router Pennsylvania State University: University Park, PA Java Developer May 2011-August 2013 Worked with the Chemistry Department to design instructional interactive physics applets for introductory Chemistry classes Used multithreading and Javas graphics libraries to construct and simulate algorithms designed to replicate natural phenomena such as the Ideal Gas Law and Wave Interference Pennsylvania State University: University Park, PA Research Assistant May 2011-November 2011 Researched the KDV equation and its linear counterpart, which model surface waves on shallow water, and used these models to investigate 'Freak Waves' in shallow water Inverted a freak wave solution to the linearized KDV equation to obtain its corresponding initial condition and conducted laboratory experiments to test this model ACTIVITIES Coursera.org ProjectEuler.net CURM (Conference on Undergraduate Research in Mathematics) November 2011 SKILLS Unix/Linux/Windows Environment, Flask, Agile SCRUM, MVC Architecture Python, Java, C++, C, Perl HTTP, RESTful Web Services, JSON Netbeans, Eclipse, Command line interface

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