Mr. Drake is a software and systems quality specialist and management
and information technology consultant for Integrated Computer
Concepts, Inc, (ICCI) in the United States. He currently leads and
manages a U.S. government agency-level Software Engineering Knowledge
Based Center's software quality engineering initiative. As part of an
industry and government outreach/partnership program, he holds
frequent seminars and tutorials covering code analysis, software
metrics, OO analysis for C++ and Java, coding practice, testing, best
current practices in software development, the business case for
software engineering, software quality engineering, project
management, organizational dynamics and change management, and the
people side of information technology.
Mr. Drake has personally measured and analyzed over 125,000,000 lines
of Java, C++, C, Ada, Fortran, Pascal, and Assembler code plus others.
He supports the "weak-link" theory of software development and the use
of software entropy principles as a risk identifier for generating
higher quality software-based information technology systems.
He is the principal author of a chapter on "Metrics Used for
Object-Oriented Software Quality" for a CRC Press Object Technology
Handbook published in December of 1998. In addition, Mr. Drake is the
author of a theme article entitled: "Measuring Software Quality: A
Case Study" published in the November 1996 issue of IEEE Computer.
Mr. Drake is listed with the International Who's Who for Information
Technology for 1999, is a member of IEEE and an affiliate member of
the IEEE Computer Society. He is also a Certified Software Test
Engineer (CSTE) from the Quality Assurance Institute (QAI). He
considers himself a quality advocate and a software archaeologist.