
Software craftsman, author of 'Bridging the Communication Gap' and 'Test Driven .NET Development with FitNesse'
London, United Kingdom

Software craftsman, author of 'Bridging the Communication Gap' and 'Test Driven .NET Development with FitNesse'
London, United Kingdom
I am a software craftsman with a passion for new technologies, programming and writing. I wrote several books and online guides on acceptance testing and TDD, including Bridging the Communication Gap and Test Driven .NET Development with Fitnesse.
I help teams improve and get the most out of test-driven development and agile acceptance testing, including process review, workshop facilitation, test strategy consulting, mentoring and code review. I am generally available for consulting opportunities. Contact me for a quick chat to see how I could help you. (for contact information, see http://gojko.net/contact)
My expertise is drawn from ten years of industry experience in projects related to equity and energy trading, mobile positioning, e-commerce, betting and gaming and complex configuration management. I have worked with a wide variety of technologies and platforms, ranging from Python mobile applications to .NET/J2EE trading platforms and Oracle-centric transaction processing systems.
Agile acceptance testing, Behaviour-Driven Development, Test-Driven Development, agile software practices, improving software development teams and processes
International Federation of Journalists (IFJ),
Nezavisno Udruzenje Novinara Srbije (NUNS)
- First prize in the 64k Intro category (programming near real-time animations in x86 assembly), Scene Strike II computer demonstration competition, Belgrade, 1997.
- Second prize, federal competition of Yugoslav high schools in programming, 1997.
- Third prize, state competition of Serbian high schools in programming, 1997.
- Third prize, federal competition of Yugoslav high schools in programming, 1996.
- First prize, state competition of Serbian high schools in programming, 1996.
- First prize, state competition of Serbian primary schools in programming, 1993.