Backend developer & consultant with over 15 years of experience. I have worked in a wide range of programming languages including Ruby, PHP, Visual Basic, C#, FoxPro, React Native, Go. My database expertise includes MySQL, PostgreSQL, Cassandra, CouchDB, Microsoft SQL Server.
Today I prefer to work with:
- Ruby (Rails, Hanami, dry-rb stack, command-line utilities)
- PHP (WordPress plugins)
- Go (API, command-line utilities)
Also I have great experience in building scalable APIs for startups and refactoring legacy codebases. I am highly interested in DevOps methodology and try to automate my daily routines. I spend a lot of free time on managing my Open Source projects because its allow me to improve programming and time-management skills.
How can I help you?
- Create a backend for your mobile and frontend clients from scratch
- Refactor and clean up huge RoR codebases
- Set up Continuous Integration and Continuous Delivery processes
- Add linters, spell checkers and something like that
- Create, publish and manage WordPress plugins
- Improve your website’s performance
Feel free to contact me
Just fill in the contact form or send me email to alexander@kadyrov.dev.
My GitHub profile is available here: https://github.com/gruz0
I couldn’t decide on the plugin at first. Installed then uninstalled it. I understand the privacy argument and also there is still a degree of link paranoia where SEO’s take down perfectly good links because their fighting a search algorithm. So I didn’t want to be bothered with people asking to take links down and uninstalled it. Fast forward to today, I had a rethink and changed my mind. Links are and should be public by nature, as a webmaster I would like to see where my traffic is coming from. So I can forge new relationships, provide useful links to readers and be transparent in where I link to for both visitor and webmaster. So I reinstalled and this time it stays. Brilliant plugin btw.