About
About The Site
Coehome.com is designed as the central point of contact and information for the author. It provides general information, answers to commonly answered questions, basic ramblings about the state of Information Technology, and links to related sites. It also contains some personal information. This site is not a social networking wonder, nor is it an attempt to supplant how-to forge. It is simply a site to make things a little more convenient for me.
This site is by no means “The Complete Diary of the Life of Ken”, but it is a decent starting point for contact.
About The Author
The IT industry is an ever-changing landscape. The only thing constant is the evolution of systems.
There is a problem in any business environment with information technology infrastructure development and integration. Systems age, technology out-paces current systems and software, and new methods of communication and data interchange constantly trivialize any enterprises digital profile.
With over 18 years of practice in the field, my background includes experience in a wide range of tasks with focuses varying from console and terminal environments, through single PCs and small workgroups, to large corporate and government networks. I have a demonstrated record of success with troubleshooting and repairing systems, increasing efficiency, and optimizing the stability, security, and utilization of shared information resources. My current professional focus is in the design, integration, and maintenance of back-end support systems.
In short, I focus is on the server room.
I concenter on finding ways to improve systems and services integration, add new services and improve the interoperation of the existing data infrastructure. Data redundancy and retention, and minimizing costs by optimizing the use of existing infrastructure while carefully selecting new hardware to replace or supplement the back-end equipment is also a primary facet of my work.
Dealing with the challenges of a constantly changing data landscape can be a daunting task even before you add on the additional job of maintaining the existing infrastructure while researching, selecting, and implementing new technologies and options. This is, however, what I find most rewarding.
