Give examples how you are a problem solver rather than just a programmer I am an inventive person and an out-of-box thinker. I am especially successful in finding solutions that can improve the informational integrity of the process and reliability of interfacing with other devices or systems. When working on (?)systems(?),I sometimes come up with solutions improving the application layer of communication protocol. Example: an improvement developed for Fisher-Rosemount Systems was incorporated into the industry standard for inter-instrument communication, DeviceNet. I took the initiative to switch early from Microsoft Visual Studio 6 (C++) to .NET (C#) because beta-testing the new platform showed that the resulting code was much more reliable and readable. The productıs initial release was remarkably effective for building solutions for Web servers, desktops and portable devices. Often, while working on software solutionıs architecture, I should come up with the one that would not require the customers to purchase expensive licenses to operate the product. Sometimes, it leads to an unusual-like at (donıt understand this fragment ??????????) I can evaluate integrity of an existing process with a minimal ramp-up time. My solutions often contain functional improvements, in addition to fixing bugs. In effect, many of my solutions are inventions, as defined by US PTO, so I complete Invention Disclosures. Recent examples include closing a security hole in airline booking software, simplifying the process of applying for reimbursement from a pre-tax medical spending account, and a super tamper-proof physical seal.