Milton Abe
Senior Software Developer
Milton is a software developer, with a Masters in software engineering. He has been developing software since 1999, when he delivered his very first project at IPT-USP, Sao Paulo, Brazil. Milton taught software development for three years at FASP University (Sao Paulo/Brazil) and was responsible for the very first .NET project at Porto Seguro, the biggest insurance company in Brazil: developing an alarm and truck tracking system with geo-processing. Milton has worked since 2007 as a contractor for CODE, located in Houston, TX, as a Sr. Software Developer. He also contracts with Fornax Tecnologia, located in Sao Paulo, and BTG Pactual, Rio de Janeiro – Brazil.
Skills:
.NET Core
Objective-C
Swift
Xamarin
Java
React
Angular
Detailed Bio
Milton is a software developer, with a Masters in software engineering. He has been developing software since 1999, when he delivered his very first project at IPT-USP, Sao Paulo, Brazil. Milton taught software development for three years at FASP University (Sao Paulo/Brazil) and was responsible for the very first .NET project at Porto Seguro, the biggest insurance company in Brazil: developing an alarm and truck tracking system with geo-processing. Milton has worked since 2007 as a contractor for CODE, located in Houston, TX, as a Sr. Software Developer. He also contracts with Fornax Tecnologia, located in Sao Paulo, and BTG Pactual, Rio de Janeiro – Brazil.
Skills:
- .NET Core
- Objective-C
- Swift
- Xamarin
- Java
- React
- Angular
Projects
- IPT/USP (Visual Basic, ASP, SQL Server) – Network architecture and Administrative Software Development. (Sao Paulo / Brazil)
- Porto Seguro (C#, ASP.Net) – Alarm System (Home/Office), Truck Tracking using Geo Processing integrating Google Maps. (Sao Paulo / Brazil)
- EPS - Milos .NET Framework – extension of .NET Framework (C#) (USA / TX)
- HCI – (C#) HealthCare Software (USA / TX)
- Proximo – (C#) Using HARMS SDK to develop an interface for data extraction (USA / TX)
- American Innovations - WPF / MVVM /Prism (USA / TX)
Certifications
- Microsoft
- 2546 – Core Windows Forms Technologies with MS-Visual Studio 2005
- 2547 – Advanced Windows Forms Technologies with MS-Visual Studio 2005
- 2541 – Core Data Access with MS-Visual Studio 2005
- 2542 – Advanced Data Access with MS-Visual Studio 2005
- 2543 – Core Web Application Technologies with MS-Visual Studio 2005
- 2544 – Advanced Web Application Technologies with MS-Visual Studio 2005
Lectures
- FASP – Faculdades Associadas de São Paulo (São Paulo, Brazil)
- Building an e-commerce
- New technologies using XML
- Logic programming
- Using ASP
- Using NetObjects
Published Works
- .Net Magazine Brazil
- Using Code Rush / Refactoring
- Using NetAdvantage controls for Windows Forms
- Best practices programming
Education
- Business Administration – Bachelor’s degree – Faculdade de Economia São Luís – São Paulo / Brazil
- Software Engineering – Master’s degree – IPT/USP – Universidade de São Paulo - Brazil
Contact Information:
Articles Authored
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Building a CODE Framework Service and Consuming It on an iPhone Application
Last updated: Tuesday, May 31, 2022
Published in: VFP Conversion Papers, CODE Magazine: 2013 - May/June
In this article, you will create a CODE Framework RESTful service and an iPhone application from scratch. For the client side, you will utilize XCode (yes, you’ll need a Mac!), which uses Objective-C as the primary language. This article won’t teach you the language; you need to know the basics of Objective-C. Even if you don’t know anything about it but want to code right away, read the article “Building a Twitter Search Client on iOS,” by Ben Scherman, available for all CODE readers in the Xiine application for Windows, Android, and iPhone. For the database, you’ll use any instance of SQL Server 2008. The service will be written in C#, using the latest version of CODE Framework, available on http://codeframework.codeplex.com, where you will find not only the download link, but also a lot of useful information.
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Building an Android Application to Search Twitter
Last updated: Tuesday, February 19, 2019
Published in: CODE Magazine: 2011 - September/October
From users to developers, mobile applications used to be (not so long ago) uninteresting. Complicated flows, non-intuitive screens and limited features available used to discourage anyone. PDAs had a poor user interface with limited colors (the first ones were only black and white). It was very complicated and boring to write any code for it. Cell phones used to be a device where you could make and receive phone calls. Eventually you could play some games. But you know what? Even the games were boring most of the time!
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Demystifying React
Last updated: Monday, April 19, 2021
Published in: CODE Magazine: 2018 - September/October
You’ve probably heard about Facebook’s new JavaScript library, React. Milton shows you how it works and encourages you to consider using it on your next project.
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Post Mortem: Xiine for Android
Last updated: Tuesday, February 19, 2019
Published in: CODE Magazine: 2011 - September/October
Digital content is becoming more popular. E-book readers encourage people that like to read, to read even more because they can take all of their books on one lightweight gadget. Even though I still love hard copies of a book (you don’t need power to read it), I have had very good experiences with several digital readers.
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Post Mortem: Xiine for iOS
Last updated: Tuesday, February 19, 2019
Published in: CODE Magazine: 2012 - March/April
EPS builds a user interface for the iOS that is very similar to the Android and desktop versions.