Marc Saegesser has a diverse and extensive work experience. Marc started their career as a Programmer at the Iowa State University Physics Department, where they developed and maintained FORTRAN programs for data analysis. Marc also designed and implemented a PC-based database application for tracking objects for observation.
Marc then worked as a Lead Software Engineer at Barber-Colman, where they were responsible for software development for an environmental control and building automation host system. Marc specialized in GUI development and EGA/VGA device drivers.
After that, Marc served as a Consultant at Analysts International Corporation. Marc'sroles included design, coding, testing, and technical support for various projects. Marc worked on a customer contact tracking system, security system, GUI for a system configuration database, and a stock quote feed system.
Next, they joined Platinum Technology, Inc. as a Product Developer. Marc worked on a team creating a new web application using a three-tier architecture. Marc also researched client-side implementation options and evaluated web servers.
Marc then became the Lead Software Engineer at Apropos Technology, Inc. Marc was the owner of a web chat and collaboration product and was responsible for architectural decisions, feasibility, functional design documents, implementation, and testing. Marc designed and implemented a process cluster for a redundant and fault-tolerant solution.
Currently, Marc is working as a Lead Software Engineer at AMI Entertainment Network Inc.
Overall, Marc Saegesser has extensive experience in software engineering, web development, and project management. Marc has a strong background in design, implementation, and testing of various software systems.
Marc Saegesser attended Iowa State University from 1984 to 1988, where they obtained a Bachelor of Science (BS) degree in Computer Science. Additionally, they have obtained certifications in Principles of Reactive Programming (With Distinction) and Functional Programming Principles in Scala (With Distinction) from Coursera in 2013 and 2012 respectively.
Sign up to view 0 direct reports
Get started