Steve Acheson (M7, W4, W7, F2) is currently an Information Security Architect at Cisco
Systems, Inc., where he is a senior member of the Corporate Information
Security Department, responsible for network and system security,
including designing internal security architecture and external/firewall
access. Before working for Cisco, Steve managed security for NASA's
Numerical Aerospace Simulations facility at Ames Research Center. He
has worked in the field for over 15 years as a system administrator, network engineer, and
security analyst.
Eric Allman (T4) is the original author of Sendmail, co-founder and CTO of
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
contributer 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.
David N. Blank-Edelman (M10, R3, R6) is the Director of Technology
at the Northeastern University College of Computer and Information Science
and the author of the O'Reilly book Perl for System Administration. He has
spent the last 19 years as a system/network administrator in large multi-platform environments, including Brandeis University, Cambridge Technology
Group, and the MIT Media Laboratory. He has given several successful
invited talks off the beaten path at LISA.
Mark Burgess (W8, F4) is a professor at Oslo University College and is the
author of
cfengine. He has been researching the
principles of network
and system administration for over ten years and is the author
of Principles of Network and System Administration (John Wiley & Sons).
He is frequently invited to speak at conferences.
Gerald Carter (M9, T2, R2) has been a member of the Samba Development Team
since 1998. He has published articles with various
Web-based magazines and teaches 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 for O'Reilly Publishing.
Tom Christiansen (S9) has been involved with Perl since day zero of its 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.
Mike Ciavarella (S3, T7, T10) has been producing and editing technical documentation since
he naively agreed to write application manuals for his first
employer in the early 1980s. He has been a technical editor for
MacMillan Press and has been teaching system administrators about
documentation for the past eight years. Mike has an Honours Degree in
Science from the University of Melbourne. After a number
of years working as Senior Partner and head of the Security Practice
for Cybersource Pty Ltd, Mike returned to his alma mater, the University
of Melbourne. He now divides his time between teaching software
engineering, providing expert testimony in computer security matters,
and trying to complete a Doctorate. In his ever-diminishing spare time,
Mike is a caffeine addict and photographer.
Heison Chak (T5) works for SOMA Networks as a network engineer, focusing on network
management and performance analysis as
well as the implementation of data and voice networks. He has
undertaken to design a VoIP platform and to migrate SOMA Networks to it
from an existing legacy PBX system. Chak is an active member of
the Asterisk community.
Lee Damon (S3) has a B.S. in Speech Communication from Oregon State University. He
has been a UNIX system administrator since 1985 and has been active in SAGE
since its inception. He assisted in developing a mixed AIX/SunOS environment
at IBM Watson Research and has developed mixed environments for Gulfstream
Aerospace and QUALCOMM. He is currently leading the development effort
for the Nikola project at the University of Washington Electrical Engineering
department. He chaired the SAGE Ethics Working Group and coordinated
authorship of the initial draft of the current document. He has championed awareness of
ethics in the system administration community, including writing it into
policy documents.
Doug Dexter (M7) has been an Information Security Architect with Cisco Systems Corporate Information Security Department for six years. He and
Steve Acheson are the architects for Cisco's internal PKI deployment, which
provides certificates and signs the production code for IP phones, call
managers, and cable modems. Prior to working at Cisco, Doug was in the
US Army for 11 years and is currently a Major in an Army Reserve
Information Warfare unit. He holds an M.B.A. from the University of Texas
at Austin with a concentration in Information Systems, Controls, and
Assurance, and is a CISSP and an MCSE.
Mark-Jason Dominus (W3, W6) has been programming in Perl since 1992. He is a moderator of the comp.lang.perl.moderated newsgroup, the author of the Text::Template, Tie::File, and Memoize modules, a contributor to the Perl core, and author of the perlreftut man page. His work on the Rx regular expression debugger won the 2001 Larry Wall Award for Practical Utility. He lives in Philadelphia with his wife and several plush octopuses.
Jacob Farmer (T8) is the CTO of Cambridge Computer Services, a specialized
integrator of backup systems and storage networks. He has over 15
years of 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. 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.
Esther Filderman (S7) has been working with AFS since its infancy at
CMU, before it was called AFS, and is currently Senior Operations
Specialist and AFS administrator for the Pittsburgh Supercomputing
Center. She has been working to bring AFS content to LISA conferences
since 1999. She is also coordinating documentation efforts for the
OpenAFS project.
Æleen Frisch (M12, T3) has been a system administrator for over 20 years. 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 (M3, T11, R4) is the Chief Technologist for Corporate Technologies, Inc., a systems integrator and VAR, 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.
Geoff Halprin (M11) has spent over 25 years as a software developer, system administrator, consultant, and troubleshooter. He has written software from system management tools to mission-critical billing systems, has built and run networks for enterprises
of all sizes, and has been called upon to diagnose problems in every aspect of computing infrastructure and software. He has spent more years troubleshooting other
people's systems and programs than he cares to remember. Geoff was on the board
of the System Administrators Guild (SAGE) and is now a member of the
USENIX board of directors.
Trent Hein (S6, M6) is co-founder of Applied Trust Engineering, a leader in holistic infrastructure and security. Trent worked on the 4.4
BSD port to the MIPS architecture at Berkeley, is co-author of both
the UNIX Systems Administration Handbook and the Linux Administration
Handbook, and holds a B.S. in Computer Science from the University
of Colorado.
Brad C. Johnson (S8, M8) is vice president of SystemExperts Corporation. He 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.
Charlie Kaufman (M5) is Security Architect for the Common Language Runtime group at
Microsoft. He is editor of the new Internet Key Exchange
(IKEv2) protocol for the IPsec working group of IETF. He has contributed
to a number of IETF standards efforts, including chairing the Web
Transaction Security WG and serving as a member of the Internet
Architecture Board (IAB). He served on the National Academy of Sciences
expert panel that wrote the book Trust in Cyberspace. He was previously a
Distinguished Engineer at IBM, where he was Chief Security Architect for
Lotus Notes and Domino, and before that Network Security Architect for
Digital. He holds over 25 patents in the fields of computer security and
computer networking. He is coauthor of Network Security: Private
Communication in a Public World (Prentice Hall, 2002).
Laura Kuiper (W4, W7, F2) is currently a Computer Security Architect at Cisco
Systems, Inc., where she is a senior member of the Computer Information
Security Department, responsible for network and system security,
including designing internal security architecture and external/firewall
access. Before working for Cisco, Laura managed the network at SAIC.
She has worked in the field as a network engineer and security analyst
for over 9 years.
William LeFebvre (R5, F5) is an author, programmer, teacher, and sysadmin expert who has been using UNIX and Internet technologies since 1983. He writes a monthly column for UNIX Review and has taught since 1989 for such organizations as USENIX, the Sun User Group (SUG), MIS Training Institute, IT Forum, and Great Circle Associates. He has contributed to several widely used UNIX packages, including Wietse Venema's logdaemon package. He is also the primary programmer for the popular UNIX utility top. William is currently a technology fellow at CNN Internet Technologies, exploring the applicability of new technology to one of the busiest Web farms on the Internet. He received his bachelor's degree in 1983 and his master of science degree in 1988, both from Rice University.
Tom Limoncelli (R8, F3), co-author of The Practice of System and Network
Administration
(Addison-Wesley), is Director of IT Services at Cibernet Corp. A sysadmin and network wonk since 1987, he
has worked at Dean for America, Lumeta, Bell Labs/Lucent, Mentor Graphics, and Drew
University. He is a frequent presenter at LISA conferences.
Richard E. Mackey, Jr. (M8) is principal of SystemExperts Corporation.
Dick Mackey is regarded as one of the industry's foremost authorities on
distributed computing infrastructure and security. Before joining
SystemExperts, he worked in leading technical and director positions at The
Open Group, The Open Software Foundation (DCE), and BBN Corporation (Cronus
Distributed Computing Environment). He has been published often in security
magazines such as ISSA Password, .NET, Information Security, and SC Secure
Computing. He is a regular speaker on computer security topics at various
industry conferences. Dick has a B.S. and an M.S. in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
James Mauro (S4) is a Senior Staff Engineer in the Performance and Availability
Engineering group at Sun Microsystems. Jim's
current projects are 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.
Ned McClain (S6, M6), co-founder and CTO of Applied Trust Engineering, lectures
around the globe on applying cutting-edge technology in production computing
environments. Ned holds a B.S. in Computer Science from
Cornell University and is a contributing author of both
the UNIX Systems Administration Handbook and the Linux Administration
Handbook.
Richard McDougall (S4) is a Sun Microsystems Distinguished Engineer who
specializes in operating systems technology and system performance. He
is based at the Menlo Park Performance and Availability Engineering
group, where he drives development of performance and behavior
enhancements to the Solaris operating system and Sun's hardware
architectures. He has led the development of resource management
principles, has contributed to the development of virtual memory and file
systems within the Solaris operating system, and has architected many
tools for analysis, monitoring, and capacity planning. He is the lead author
of Resource Management (Prentice Hall). He has written numerous
articles and papers on measurement, monitoring, and capacity planning
of Solaris systems and frequently speaks at industry and customer
technical conferences on the topics of system performance and resource
management.
Radia Perlman (S5, M5) is a Distinguished Engineer at Sun Microsystems. 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.
W. Curtis Preston (T12, W5) is Vice President of Service Development for Glasshouse
Technologies, the global leader in independent storage services. Curtis has ten years' experience designing storage systems for
many environments, both large and small. As a recognized expert in the
field, Curtis has advised the major product vendors regarding product
features and implementation methods. Curtis is the administrator of the
NetBackup and NetWorker FAQs and answers the "Ask The Experts" backup
forum on SearchStorage.com. He is also the author of O'Reilly's UNIX
Backup & Recovery and Using SANs & NAS, as well as a monthly column in
Storage Magazine.
Marcus Ranum (M4, W2) is senior scientist at Trusecure Corp. and a world-renowned expert
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. 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 has taught
for the SANS Institute, the MIS Training Institute, and ISACA.
John Sellens (S2, M2) has been involved in system and network administration
since 1986 and is the author of several related USENIX papers, a number of ;login: articles, and the SAGE Short Topics in System Administration booklet #7, System and Network Administration for Higher Reliability. He holds an M.Math. in computer science from the University of Waterloo and is a chartered accountant. He is the proprietor of SYONEX, a systems and networks consultancy. From 1999 to 2004, he was the General Manager for Certainty Solutions 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.
David Skoll (T9) is founder and president of Roaring Penguin Software, Inc., a firm specializing in email filtering. Skoll is the developer of MIMEDefang,
the acclaimed open-source email inspection software, and the primary developer of CanIt and CanIt-PRO, commercial anti-spam
systems based on MIMEDefang. He is
author of Caldera's OpenLinux Unleashed and frequently writes and
presents for the Linux and open source communities. More information
can be found at https://www.roaringpenguin.com.
Marc Staveley (T6) works with Soma Networks, where he is applying his many 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 (R7) has been a Linux kernel developer since almost the very
beginnings of Linux: he implemented POSIX job control in the
0.10 Linux kernel. He is the maintainer and author of the Linux COM
serial port driver and the Comtrol Rocketport driver, and he architected
and implemented Linux's tty layer. Outside of the kernel, he is
the maintainer of the e2fsck filesystem consistency checker. Ted
is currently employed by IBM Linux Technology Center.
Alf Wachsmann (S7) works at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center
(SLAC) in the Computing Services' High-Performance Computing Group,
where he is an infrastructure designer and automation specialist. He
has a doctor's degree in natural sciences obtained in computer science
at the University of Paderborn (Germany). He worked as a post-doc in the
computing center of DESY Zeuthen (Germany) before he came to SLAC in
1999.