
Senior Engineer at Khazana
Japan

Senior Engineer at Khazana
Japan
Embedded software engineer by day, web 3.0 consultant by night. My slogan is “reinventing web 3.0” and my motto is こだわりはお客に伝わってこそ意味をなす — reflecting the duality of my professional life — while my philosophy is “hope for the best, prepare for the average, and expect the median”.
Highly skilled in C, C++, Java, Python, Ruby, JavaScript, and PHP, and will learn anything else in no time. I like to work with Gnu development tools such as emacs, gcc, gdb, make, cvs, but I can work with Microsoft tools if required. I have experience working with tools for embedded systems, like Green Hills MULTI compiler/debugging environment, MicroView PLUS debugger, the Qualcomm BREW tools, Ericsson Mobile Platform, etc.
Mail: f@lck.nu
- Writing great code in any language for any platform.
- Embedded C/C++ on mobile devices.
- Web technology, JavaScript, "AJAX", web site design etc.
- Japanese Language Proficiency Test, level 1.
(Wireless industry)
June 2009 — Present (6 months)
Mobile apps.
(Privately Held; Telecommunications industry)
November 2007 — May 2009 (1 year 7 months)
Developing embedded software on BREW (KDDI au), EMP (Softbank), MOAP(S) (NTT DoCoMo), managing customer projects for Picsel's PC Document Viewer product for au handset makers, and worked in the porting & integration team fixing core design problems that get blamed on the platform, on Picsel's UI Platform and other products.
(Public Company; 201-500 employees; Computer Software industry)
January 2005 — November 2007 (2 years 11 months)
Porting, debugging, and improving the Opera web browser on Kyocera PHS and KDDI au (Brew) phones, and developing web technology-based widgets for embedded devices.
MSc , Software Engineering, Information Technology program , 2000 — 2007
Studied too much - almost graduated.
Swetech, East Asian business culture program 2004 — 2005
Japanese language, Japanese history; culture; society; and politics, Technical Japanese 2002 — 2004
My paper about historical Japanese architecture: http://henrikfalck.com/the_historical_development_of_japanese_capital_cities.pdf
Japanese language, travel, eating good food
Swetech