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I'm Logan McGrath, I'm a senior software engineer, and I specialize in a segment of software applications engineering that sits between the framework and the business logic. In my day job at Credit Karma I work with a team to provide building blocks with which my fellow product engineers can write less code and more quickly deliver valuable features to members. By night I dabble in esoteric programming languages, theories, and tools to better hone my craft. It's what I like to do when my husband isn't encouraging me to go play outside.
I have been working in tech since 2007, where I started as just a wee web developer putting together shopping carts. I've since found my way into bigger projects.
Here's a sampling of things I've blogged about. A complete selection may be found on their dedicated page.
When I'm away from the computer I'm spending time with my husband Dr. Corey Blanchette and our two dogs, Jellybean and Meatball. Corey cooks and I do the dishes if I can beat him to them. Most evenings we can be found on the patio enjoying my latest mixology attempt while he tries to teach me ways to remember different parts of human anatomy. For the most part all I can retain are the acronyms that sound inappropriate, and I'm happy to share them over a drink. One of my favorites is a mnemonic he was taught in school to name the "carpals", which I'm pretty sure is a kind of bone. Corey jokingly dismisses my technical jargon as magic, but I admit his skillset feels a skosh wizardly to me!
My primary customers are technical teams looking to accelerate time to market for new features and changes. Product teams need solid building blocks to deliver these features and I work as a force multiplier by providing the low code frameworks, tools, and infrastructure required to ship quickly and be nimble to change. My goal as a professional is to craft systems that reduce the number of teams and organizations, and more importantly time and cost, required to ship work in order to maximize value to the business and better serve customers.
Engineers are too expensive to be putting together bespoke content with high rates of churn. Low code allows engineers to focus on the hard problems and enables more opportunities for businesses to better harness the value they bring. I mentor engineers to help them realize their full potential as technologists and become drivers in better engineering with less code.
As this is my site and my life, all opinions I express here are my own. Opinions being what they are, I recognize that I might be wrong and openly invite learning opportunities.
I like to share what makes life worthwhile. Sometimes that's helping my dogs figure out something new, or finding a really cool trick at work that helps my team out. Sometimes hard things have to happen in order for life to be worthwhile, and I can't promise that reading about what I share is easy. I've come to good places by way of some painful lessons both personally and professionally.
My goal isn't to express edgy opinions, technical or otherwise. It's as easy to express something objectively harmful and empower grotesque behavior as it is to simply to hate on technology and get some fake internet points. Anyone can write a page full of salt. Salt's a popular, low-effort genre. I want show people things that can be constructive, and I think this is an important bar for myself.
If a subject makes me feel salty, I'll denote it with a salt tag so that you know I'm simply complaining into a vacuum wherein I don't see solutions by choice or otherwise.