Systems Analyst at The National Archives
United Kingdom
Systems Analyst at The National Archives
United Kingdom
(Government Agency; 501-1000 employees; Government Administration industry)
May 2003 — Present (6 years 3 months)
Leading technical work in the Digital Continuity Project, examining a range of technologies to preserve access to critical business information over periods of decades across all central government departments.
(Privately Held; 51-200 employees; Computer Software industry)
May 2000 — March 2003 (2 years 11 months)
Software product design, development, and liaison with technical partners.
Zygon pioneered multi-channel product information and cataloging systems for enterprise retail and distribution companies.
(Educational Institution; 1001-5000 employees; Computer Software industry)
January 1997 — May 2000 (3 years 5 months)
Developing a research tool for the UK's oldest and most important public document, Domesday Book.
The resulting software "Domesday Explorer" was a medalist in the 2002 British Computer Society IT awards, and has been deployed around the world in libraries and universities.
MSc , Information Security , 2003 — 2007
Modules studied: Security Management, Cryptography, Computer Security, Network Security, Database Security, Information Crime.
My dissertation was "Mandatory Access Control for Legal Compliance", which describes an access control system I designed to ensure legal access to digital government records.
IEEE member