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2004 USENIX Annual Technical Conference, June 27-July 2, 2004, Boston Marriott Copley Place, Boston, MA
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  TRAINING TRACK

Overview | By Day (Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday) | By Instructor | All in One File

Tutorial Instructors
A–C   |  F–G   |   J   |   M   |   P–T
Eric Allman (W4) is the original author of Sendmail, co-founder and CTO of Eric Allman Sendmail, Inc., and co-author of Sendmail, published by O'Reilly. At U.C. Berkeley, he was the chief programmer on the INGRES database management project, leader of the Mammoth project, and an early contributor to BSD, authoring syslog, tset, the -me troff macros, and trek. Eric designed database user and application interfaces at Britton Lee (later Sharebase) and contributed to the Ring Array Processor project for neural-network-based speech recognition at the International Computer Science Institute. Eric is on the Editorial Review Board of ACM Queue magazine and is a former member of the Board of Directors of the USENIX Association.

Dan Appelman (S6) is a lawyer in the Silicon Valley office of a major international law firm. Dan Appelman He has been practicing in the areas of cyberspace and software law for many years. He was the lawyer for Berkeley Software Design in the BSDI/UNIX System Laboratories (AT&T) case. Dan is the attorney for the USENIX Association and for many tech companies. He is also founding chair of his firm's Information Technology practice group, is the current chair of the California Bar's Standing Committee on Cyberspace Law, and is a member of the American Bar Association Cyberspace Committee.

Gerald Carter (R2, F2) has been a member of the Samba Team since 1998. Gerald Carter He has published articles in various Web-based magazines and gives instructional courses as a consultant for several companies. Currently employed by Hewlett-Packard as a Samba developer, Gerald has written books for SAMS Publishing and is the author of the recent LDAP System Administration (O'Reilly & Associates).

Tom Christiansen (M5) has been involved with Perl since day zero of its Tom Christiansen initial public release in 1987. Author of several books on Perl, including The Perl Cookbook and Programming Perl from O'Reilly, Tom is also a major contributor to Perl's online documentation. He holds undergraduate degrees in computer science and Spanish and a Master's in computer science. He now lives in Boulder, Colorado.

Jacob Farmer (S2) is the CTO of Cambridge Computer Services, a specialized Jacob Farmer integrator of backup systems and storage networks. He has over 15 years' experience with storage technologies and writes an expert advice column for InfoStor magazine. He is currently writing a book on storage networking.
 

Rik Farrow (S1, M1) provides UNIX and Internet security consulting and training. Rik Farrow He has been working with UNIX system security since 1984 and with TCP/IP networks since 1988. He has taught at the IRS, Department of Justice, NSA, NASA, US West, Canadian RCMP, Swedish Navy, and for many US and European user groups. He is the author of UNIX System Security, published by Addison-Wesley in 1991, and System Administrator's Guide to System V (Prentice Hall, 1989). Farrow writes a column for ;login: and a network security column for Network magazine. Rik lives with his family in the high desert of northern Arizona and enjoys hiking and mountain biking when time permits.

Aeleen Frisch (T3, W3, R4) has been a system administrator for over 20 years. Aeleen Frisch She currently looks after a pathologically heterogeneous network of UNIX and Windows systems. She is the author of several books, including Essential System Administration (now in its 3rd edition).
 

Peter Baer Galvin (S5) is the Chief Technologist for Corporate Technologies, Inc., a systems integrator and VAR, Peter Baer Galvin and was the Systems Manager for Brown University's Computer Science Department. He has written articles for Byte and other magazines. He wrote the "Pete's Wicked World" and "Pete's Super Systems" columns at SunWorld. He is currently contributing editor for Sys Admin, where he manages the Solaris Corner. Peter is co-author of the Operating Systems Concepts and Applied Operating Systems Concepts textbooks. As a consultant and trainer, Peter has taught tutorials on security and system administration and has given talks at many conferences and institutions on such topics as Web services, performance tuning, and high availability.

Joshua Jensen (S3, M3) has worked for IBM and Cisco Systems and was Red Hat's first instructor, examiner, and RHCE. Joshua Jensen He worked with Red Hat for 4 1/2 years, during which time he wrote and maintained large parts of the Red Hat curriculum: Networking Services and Security, System Administration, Apache and Secure Web Server Administration, and the Red Hat Certified Engineer course and exam. Having been working with Linux since 1996, Joshua now finds himself having gone full circle, being now employed by IBM while working with Red Hat Linux onsite at Cisco Systems. In his spare time he dabbles in cats, fish, boats, and frequent flyer miles.

Brad C. Johnson (M4) is vice president of SystemExperts Corporation. Brad C. JohnsonHe has participated in seminal industry initiatives such as the Open Software Foundation, X/Open, and the IETF, and has been published in such journals as Digital Technical Journal, IEEE Computer Society Press, Information Security Magazine, Boston Business Journal, Mass High Tech Journal, ISSA Password Magazine, and Wall Street & Technology. Brad is a regular tutorial instructor and conference speaker on topics related to practical network security, penetration analysis, middleware, and distributed systems. He holds a B.A. in computer science from Rutgers University and an M.S. in applied management from Lesley University.

Steve Johnson (W2) earned his Ph.D. in Mathematics, but has spent his entire career in computing. Steve Johnson He spent nearly 20 years at Bell Labs and AT&T, where he worked on topics as diverse as computer music, psychometrics, and VLSI design, but he is best known for his work on UNIX: Yacc, Lint, the Portable C Compiler, and co-authoring (with Dennis Ritchie) the first AT&T UNIX port. He also ran the UNIX System V language development department for several years in the mid 1980s. In 1986 he went to Silicon Valley, where he was part of a half-dozen or so startup companies, most recently Transmeta. In 2002, he became Senior Fellow at The MathWorks in the Boston area, where he helps determine the evolution and technology of the MATLAB programming language.

James Mauro (M2) is a Senior Staff Engineer in the Performance andJames Mauro Availability Engineering group at Sun Microsystems. Jim's currently focused on quantifying and improving enterprise platform availability, including minimizing recovery times for data services and Solaris. Jim co-developed a framework for system availability measurement and benchmarking and is working on implementing this framework within Sun.

Richard McDougall (M2) is an established engineer in the Performance ApplicationRichard McDougall Engineering group at Sun Microsystems, where he focuses on large systems performance and architecture. He has over twelve years of performance tuning, application/kernel development, and capacity planning experience on many different flavors of UNIX. Richard has written a wide range of papers and tools to measure, monitor, trace, and size UNIX systems, including the memory sizing methodology for Sun, the set of tools known as MemTool to allow fine-grained instrumentation of memory for Solaris, the recent Priority Paging memory algorithms in Solaris, and many of the unbundled tools for Solaris.

Gary McGraw (T4), Cigital, Inc.'s CTO, researches software security and sets technical vision in Gary McGraw the area of Software Quality Management. Dr. McGraw is co-author of four popular books: Java Security (Wiley, 1996), Securing Java (Wiley, 1999), Software Fault Injection (Wiley 1998), and Building Secure Software (Addison-Wesley, 2001). His fifth book, Exploiting Software (Addison-Wesley), was released in February 2004. A noted authority on software and application security, Dr. McGraw consults with major software producers and consumers. Dr. McGraw has written over sixty peer-reviewed technical publications and functions as principal investigator on grants from Air Force Research Labs, DARPA, National Science Foundation, and NIST's Advanced Technology Program. He serves on Advisory Boards of Authentica, Counterpane, Fortify Software, and Indigo Security as well as advising the CS Department at UC Davis. Dr. McGraw holds a dual Ph.D. in Cognitive Science and Computer Science from Indiana University and a B.A. in Philosophy from UVa. He regularly contributes to popular trade publications and is often quoted in national press articles.

Radia Perlman (S4) is a Distinguished Engineer at Sun Microsystems. Radia Perlman She is known for her contributions to bridging (spanning tree algorithm) and routing (link state routing), as well as security (sabotage-proof networks). She is the author of Interconnections: Bridges, Routers, Switches, and Internetworking Protocols and co-author of Network Security: Private Communication in a Public World, two of the top ten networking reference books, according to Network Magazine. She is one of the twenty-five people whose work has most influenced the networking industry, according to Data Communications Magazine. She has about fifty issued patents, an S.B. and S.M. in mathematics and a Ph.D. in computer science from MIT, and an honorary doctorate from KTH, the Royal Institute of Technology in Sweden.

Marcus Ranum (T5, R5, F5) is senior scientist at Trusecure Corp. and a world-renowned expertMarcus Ranum on security system design and implementation. He is recognized as the inventor of the proxy firewall and the implementer of the first commercial firewall product. Since the late 1980s, he has designed a number of groundbreaking security products, including the DEC SEAL, the TIS firewall toolkit, the Gauntlet firewall, and NFR's Network Flight Recorder intrusion detection system. He has been involved in every level of operations of a security product business, from developer, to founder and CEO of NFR. Marcus has served as a consultant to many FORTUNE 500 firms and national governments, as well as serving as a guest lecturer and instructor at numerous high-tech conferences. In 2001, he was awarded the TISC Clue award for service to the security community, and he holds the ISSA lifetime achievement award.

David Rhoades (T1, W1, R1, F1) is a principal consultant with Maven Security Consulting, Inc. David Rhoades Since 1996, David has provided information protection services for various FORTUNE 500 customers. His work has taken him across the US and abroad to Europe and Asia, where he has lectured and consulted in various areas of information security. David has a B.S. in computer engineering from the Pennsylvania State University and is an instructor for the SANS Institute, the MIS Training Institute, and Sensecurity (based in Singapore).

John Sellens (W5) has been involved in system and network administration since 1986 John Sellens and is the author of several related USENIX papers, a number of ;login: articles, and SAGE booklet #7, System and Network Administration for Higher Reliability. He holds an M.S. in computer science from the University of Waterloo and is a chartered accountant. He is currently the General Manager for Certainty Solutions (formerly known as GNAC) in Toronto. Prior to joining Certainty, John was the Director of Network Engineering at UUNET Canada and was a staff member in computing and information technology at the University of Waterloo for 11 years.

Marc Staveley (F4) works with Soma Networks, where he is applying his many Marc Staveley years of experience with UNIX development and administration in leading their IT group. Previously Marc had been an independent consultant and also held positions at Sun Microsystems, NCR, Princeton University, and the University of Waterloo. He is a frequent speaker on the topics of standards-based development, multi-threaded programming, system administration, and performance tuning.

Theodore Ts'o (T2) has been a Linux kernel developer since almost the veryTheodore Ts'o beginnings of Linux—he implemented POSIX job control in the 0.10 Linux kernel. He is the maintainer and author for the Linux COM serial port driver and the Comtrol Rocketport driver. He architected and implemented Linux's tty layer. Outside of the kernel, he is also the maintainer of the e2fsck filesystem consistency checker. Ted is a Senior Technical Staff Member of IBM's Linux Technology Center.

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Last changed: 9 June 2004 jel