Meet the Enterprise Systems Faculty:
- Bob Abrams, RAS and Problem Determination, IBM
- Shirley Brost, DB2 for z/OS, IBM
- Robert M. Cannistra - High Availability Storage Networking, Marist College
- Bryan Childs, z/OS Advanced Topics, IBM / Marist College
- Mike Cirulli, z/OS Networking, IBM
- Greg Daynes, z/OS Installation, IBM
- Peter Enrico, Adjunct Instructor - z/OS Performance Fundamentals, Marist College
- Gary Fisher, z/OS Networking, IBM / Marist College
- Matthew Johnson, Professional Lecturer, Marist College
- Craig Johnston, z/OS Security, IBM
- Eitel J.M. Lauria - Business Analytics, Marist College
- Philip Marsh, z/OS COBOL, IBM
- Geoff Nicholls, IMS Fundamentals, IBM
- Ben Rogers, z/OS Security
- Helen Tsang, z/OS Installation and Migration, IBM
- Jon Veilleux, Introduction to z/OS and Major Subsystems, Aetna, Inc.
- Marna Walle, z/OS Installation, IBM
Angelo Corridori
Director of Large Systems Education, Marist College
Mr. Corridori is currently a faculty member and Director of Large Systems Education. In this role, Mr. Corridori is responsible for teaching and developing the Large Systems education curriculum which offers online classes through the Institute for Data Center Professionals (IDCP). Mr. Corridori works closely with the IBM Academic Initiative and an Advisory Board with broad industry representation that helps develop new classes and shape the content of the classes to meet the skill needs of potential employers. He is also responsible for increasing student enrollments and recruiting qualified faculty to meet the growing needs of the program.
His prior experience includes a thirty three year career at IBM Corporation where he held technical, staff and management positions in the IBM Poughkeepsie software and hardware product development laboratory. His most recent position included responsibility for the System z clustering (Parallel Sysplex) and disaster recovery (GDPS) technologies as the technology development team leader. Prior to joining IBM, Mr. Corridori worked at Pratt and Whitney Aircraft where he was responsible for military and commercial aircraft mission, airframe, and engine analysis.
Mr. Corridori also has over 25 years of teaching computer related subjects at vocational schools and colleges. He is a recent recipient of an IBM faculty award aimed at developing large systems technology case studies.
Bob Abrams
RAS and Problem Determination, IBM
Bob Abrams is a Senior Technical Staff Member (STSM) in z/OS Design & Development at IBM in Poughkeepsie, NY. Celebrating 30 years at IBM, Bob focuses on issues related to z/OS Reliability, Availability and Serviceability (RAS) issues, and Problem Determination simplification. Bob spent his first 10 years at IBM in the z/OS Consoles area, designing and developing a number of exciting operational improvements. After spending four years as a JES2 development manager, Bob focused on improving the Problem Management and RAS areas, analyzing and defining new functions to address customer requirements throughout the z/OS product. He is currently working on ways to simplify problem determination and problem data management for z/OS installations.
Shirley Brost
DB2 for z/OS, IBM
Shirley Brost is a Senior Technical Instructor for IBM's Information Management / Software Group, specializing in DB2 System and Database Administration. Shirley earned Bachelor of Science degrees in Computer Science and Mathematics from the University of South Dakota, and a Master of Science degree in Technology Management from the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology. She has over 30 years of educational experience, and is an IBM Certified Learning Professional. Shirley is a frequent speaker at industry conferences, and has authored materials for several IBM customer training courses. Shirley has taught the online DB2 Fundamentals course for Marist College since 2009.
Robert M. Cannistra
Sr. Professional Lecturer for the School of Computer Science and Mathematics, Marist College
Robert M. Cannistra is a Sr. Professional Lecturer for the School of Computer Science and Mathematics at Marist College. Mr. Cannistra holds the responsibilities of Information Technology discipline chair, School of Computer Science and Mathematics lab coordinator, and project manager for the Center for Collaborative and On-Demand Computing. Mr. Cannistra also provides consulting services for network infrastructure, design and security needs.
Mr. Cannistra has held the positions of Northeast Regional Manager, Technical Services Manager and Senior Consultant for a Cisco Gold Partner. His time there was spent designing, configuring, and implementing highly accessible data networks for various enterprise, service provider and Internet companies across the world, some of those clients include Quaker Oats, Milwaukee Electric Tool, AC Nielsen, Cogent Communications and EthnicGrocer.com, among numerous others.. Upon the completion of each client implementation he would develop and instruct customized training courses to help the client manage the newly designed networks. Mr. Cannistra has taught as an adjunct faculty member at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) for their Computer Science, Engineering, and Information Technology curricula and as an adjunct technical instructor for a technical institute in Poughkeepsie, NY. He has also held the positions of Senior Network Engineer for About.com, Inc., Internet and Intranet Infrastructure Webmaster at AT&T Solutions and Systems Engineer at Kodak Imaging Services.
Mr. Cannistra holds a Master of Science degree in Computer Science/Information Systems, a Bachelor of Science degree in Computer Science, an Associate of Science in Liberal Arts and Science and several industry technical certifications including CCAI-CCNA, CCAI-Security, CCNA, CCNP, CCDA, CCDP, CCSP, CSE, MCSE, and CLP.
Bryan Childs
z/OS Assembler, IBM / Marist College
Bryan Childs is a Senior level software engineer at IBM and has been with the company for over 20 years. He earned his bachelor's degree in Mathematics & Computer Science at SUNY Potsdam with honors in 1989. He subsequently earned his Master's degree in Computer Science at Marist while working full time at IBM. He has completed numerous z/OS development assignments in RACF, Parallel Sysplex, and GRS, and has also assisted with testing & servicing all of these components as well. He has served as an adjunct professor at Marist for several undergraduate computer science classes. He is currently the development team leader in GRS.
Mike Cirulli
z/OS Networking, IBM
B.S. Computer Science Union College
M.S Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
28 Years at IBM
13 Years Mainframe Manufacturing Test Process Development
7 Years in z/OS Level 2 Defect support, primarily with the z/OS sysplex Components. Working with IBM customers to resolve system outages both setup/user errors as well as identifying problems in z/OS operating system code.
5 Years in z/OS Software Test working with Network and Connectivity Components. Testing Open System Adapter firmware and it's interaction with zSeries operating systems and various network components. Creating unique network infrastructures to test the functions of both the firmware and operating systems. Identifying problems in the network and resolving them to setup/network/firmware issues.
3 Years in zSeries Networking Firmware Development. Working with the Open Systems Adapter firmware developing new functions as well as resolving problems reported by IBM customers as well as the various IBM Test Sites.
Greg Daynes
z/OS Installation, IBM
Greg Daynes graduated from SUNY Binghamton with a Bachelor of Science in Mathematics with a Specialization in Computer Science (they didn't have a CS degree in 1978). He worked at AT&T from 1978 until 1988, first as an IMS systems programmer and then the lead MVS system programmer. Since Feb 1988, Greg has worked at IBM focusing on software packaging, installation, deployment, and maintenance best practices. His current title at IBM is Senior Technical Staff Member responsible for z/OS Installation Deployment Architecture.
Peter Enrico
Adjunct Instructor - z/OS Performance Fundamentals, Marist College
Peter Enrico has strong and diverse experience with the IBM zArchitecture platform, and a solid background in z/OS, Workload Manager, J2EE, WebSphere Application Server, Web Services, e-business applications, application architecture, Parallel Sysplex, and z/OS UNIX System Services. He also has a good deal experience with a variety of UNIX platforms, ERP applications, and distributed application architecture.
Peter has a well-rounded computing knowledge base, but he specializes in computer performance analysis, measurement, tuning, and capacity planning of large enterprise computing systems, subsystems, and e-business applications. Peter's abilities extend beyond just performance since he is considered a strong project manager. Peter has a reputation as a rounded technical project leader with the ability to get large complex projects under control. Last, but certainly not least, Peter is a highly qualified and effective seminar instructor and conference lecturer. He is known as someone that can explain complex computing concepts to wide audiences, including managers and executive, in an effective and easily understandable manner.
Peter started his career working for IBM as an MVS systems programmer and field tester of new MVS releases. From there, he worked for 5 years as a designer and developer on IBM's Resource Measurement Facility (RMF) product where his responsibilities included architecture of new hardware and software performance measurements, performance data collection design, enhancements to SMF records with the latest measurements, and updates to performance data reporting. Eventually Peter left RMF to become a member of the MVS Workload Manager Algorithms design and development team for the initial WLM release. After this assignment, he worked as the lead performance analyst responsible for the overall performance of MVS/ESA Version 5.2, working with MVS system designers and developers to improve performance of this MVS release.
Peter returned to the WLM design and development team to work on development of WLM management of enclave and application environment workloads. Later he also was on the team responsible for porting SAP R/3 to the S/390 platform and for SAP R/3 performance benchmarking. Peter also did some SAP R/3 system development and porting work. His last assignment while working for IBM was with the team responsible for porting and benchmarking ERB product BaaN MVS UNIX.
In 1997, Peter joined Watson and Walker, Inc. working under the direction of Cheryl Watson. Watson and Walker, Inc. is a well known and respected consulting company, which publishes the popular "Cheryl Watson's Tuning Letter". During his time with Watson and Walker, Inc. he worked with Cheryl developing her advanced performance seminar materials. Peter was also the managing editor and contributing author to the Cheryl Watson's Tuning Letter.
Peter also has extensive experience porting UNIX applications (client-server) to the IBM zSeries platform. Peter has led several major UNIX application and database porting efforts to the IBM UNIX System Services platform. He has also led a number of performance design, evaluation and benchmarking efforts for applications UNIX applications on the z/OS platform.
Since 1999 Peter Enrico has worked as an independent systems and software performance consultant, seminar instructor, benchmarker, and software project manager and designer. His zSeries customers include many large and small corporations in nearly every corporate sector and around the world. Due to his diverse and unique set of skills, on a regular basis many customers, vendors, and even IBM, tap Peter's performance knowledge of z/OS, zArchitecture, Workload Manager, WebSphere on z/OS, e-business, Parallel Sysplex, and UNIX Systems Services, and general workload analysis.
Peter offers several highly regarded educational performance offerings and is considered a highly qualified and knowledgeable instructor. All of Peter's seminars get rave reviews from students.
Peter is a regular speaker at SHARE, IBM's zSeries Expo, both national and regional Computer Measurement Groups (CMGs), and variety of international conferences. Peter has published a variety of presentations and papers on a wide variety of zSeries performance related topics.
Gary Fisher
z/OS Networking, IBM / Marist College
Gary Fisher has been a programmer for IBM for 29 years. Gary has worked in the US, France, and Ireland on a wide variety of projects dealing with software, hardware, and networks, focusing on connecting computers (to anything and everything). Gary has received several awards and authored several patents, mostly for work in automating multi-system connectivity management. Gary received a Bachelors of Science from Buffalo State College and a Masters of Science in Computer Science from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and is an adjunct professor at Marist College. Gary is currently creating a Metropolitan Area Network to interconnect large and diverse computer labs and networks.
Matthew Johnson
Professional Lecturer, Marist College
School of Computer Science and Mathematics, Marist College, Poughkeepsie, New York, AIX on Power Certificate program.
Mr. Johnson is a Professional Lecturer in Information Technology with expertise in Unix/Linux operating systems, web programming and computer graphics. Prior to joining Marist College in a full time capacity, Mr. Johnson taught Computer Science and Web Development classes as an adjunct at both Marist College and the State University of New York at New Paltz. Mr. Johnson is a new contributor to the Institute for Data Center Professionals and looks forward to sharing his expertise and providing students with exposure to this important technology.
In addition to his experience in academia, Mr. Johnson worked for more than five years as a software engineer and architect for Informeta, LLC, developing artificially intelligent data quality analysis tools.
Mr. Johnson holds a Masters Degree in Computer Science from the State University of New York and resides in the Hudson Valley with his wife and two children.
Craig Johnston
z/OS Security, IBM
Craig is currently working in IBM's STG Lab Services group. his main tasks are to assist clients with implementation of zSeries security solutions. Specific focus has been on encryption key management and security system assessments. Provide education to clients on all aspects of enterprise security. A large part of his duties include educating the client teams on security related topics, and bringing ‘best practices’ to client processes.
For over a decade, Craig was responsible for the design and implementation of the test approach definitions for security related elements of the z/OS operating system. These strategies included the interaction between security elements and other system components, the base OS, and other platforms such as Linux and Windows. In the past he has performed code development, functional and system level testing, and project management duties.
Eitel Lauria
Director of the Master of Science in Information Systems, Co-Director of the Master of Science in Technology Management, Marist College
Eitel J.M. Lauría is an Associate Professor of Information Systems at Marist College, Poughkeepsie, NY. Prof. Lauría serves as director of the Master of Science in Information Systems, co-director of the Master of Science in Technology Management and project manager at the Center for Collaborative and On-Demand Computing.
Dr. Lauría holds a PhD in Information Science from University at Albany, SUNY. Professor Lauría is also an Electrical Engineer from University of Buenos Aires, Argentina and holds a joint MBA from Universidad del Salvador (Argentina) and Universidad de Deusto (Spain).
Before joining Marist College, Dr. Lauría held faculty positions at University of Buenos Aires, Universidad del Salvador and University at Albany. He has also served as an information systems and information technology consultant to Microsoft, IBM, Exxon, and other global corporations, advising on such topics as decision support systems, business intelligence, data management and distributed applications. Dr. Lauria is co-author of a book on information quality published by MIT/IQ. His research in Bayesian networks and statistical machine learning has been published in Decision Support Systems, the European Journal of Operational Research, and other scholarly publications.
Dr. Lauría is one of the two recipients of the 2007-2008 Faculty Recognition Award for his scholarly work. In 2007, a paper on data quality written by Dr. Lauría in collaboration with Dr. Giri Tayi (University at Albany) won the best research category of the Premio Sadosky. The Premio Sadosky is the most important Argentine IT award, sponsored by CESSI (http://www.cessi.org.ar), the largest IT vendor consortium in Argentina, that includes companies such as IBM, Oracle, Accenture, EDS, Microsoft, Google, SAP, Siemens among its members.
Philip Marsh
z/OS COBOL, IBM
Asst. Professor of Computer Information Systems Dutchess Community College
Education: BS degree in Biology from Cornell University, Ithaca, NY .
MS degree in Computer Science from Marist College, Poughkeepsie, NY
MS degree in Education Technology from Capella University, Minneapolis, MN
Certificate from IBM Corporation in Systems Programming
Employment: IBM Corporation 1967-1992 (Retired in 1992) Software Developer, IBM instructor of Software Development, Manager of Programming
Education: Dutchess Community College (1992-Present), Assistant Professor of Computer Information System, Professor of Software Development (VB, C++, S/390 Assembler Language), Operating Systems, Systems Analysis
Geoff Nicholls
IMS Fundamentals, IBM
Geoff Nicholls is a Certified Consulting IT Specialist with IBM, with more than 30 years of IT experience. He has been a member of the IMS Advocate team for the IBM Silicon Valley Laboratory in California since 1998, and is based in Melbourne Australia. Geoff has been supporting IMS customers in Australia and throughout the world since joining IBM in 1989. Previously, Geoff was an IMS Specialist with the International Technical Support Organization, San Jose Center, where he guided the creation of many IMS Redbooks. Geoff has a Bachelor of Science from the University of Melbourne, Australia, majoring in Computer Science. He has worked as an Application Programmer and Database Administrator for several insurance companies before specializing in database and transaction management systems with Unisys and IBM.
Ben Rogers
z/OS Security
Ben has extensive experience testing z/OS security components including LDAP, RACF, PKI, EIM, Kerberos, SSL and ICSF. He is a published author with topics ranging from identity administration and web services security for z/OS, Kerberos SPNEGO implementations, and OpenPGP key management and secure data exchange between business partners. He has architected and implemented a common z/OS security configuration for multiple sysplexes in the z/OS test lab so that security testing can happen anywhere and anytime. He has designed and implemented several Java based applications including a J2EE based OpenPGP key server designed to facilitate secure distribution of OpenPGP keys and a threaded Java test tool. Currently Ben is an IT Specialist and the System z Security team lead for the Lab Services organization where he designs and implements security solutions ranging from ICSF and tape encryption cryptography to Kerberos, RACF, PKI and LDAP. Ben is also the CTO for a startup Public Relations services company.
Helen Tsang
z/OS Installation and Migration, IBM
BS in Computer Science from CUNY, 1981
Worked at Texaco, Inc. from 1981 until 1984 as an Application Programmer and a Database Administrator.
Worked at IBM since 1984 on z/OS Installation and Migration issues; CBPDO and ServerPac Installation; MVS and z/OS Product Packaging.
Jon Veilleux
Introduction to z/OS and Major Subsystems, Aetna, Inc.
Jon Veilleux is a Senior Systems Programmer who has System Programmer at Aetna Inc. for 28 years. He has installed, supported, and debugged the MVS, OS390, MVS/XA, and z/OS operating systems and many of the subsystems (JES2, MQ, CICS, WebSphere). He is experienced in several computer languages including Assembler, REXX, CLIST, JCL, and Shell scripting. His recent duties include developing and presenting operating system classes, and mentoring junior staff members.
Marna Walle
z/OS Installation, IBM
Marna Walle is a Senior Technical Staff Member in the Systems and Technology Group at IBM Poughkeepsie, where she works within the z/OS Development organization. Her current responsibilities include z/OS release migration and new installation technologies. Marna is a frequent speaker at customer conferences on z/OS installation and migration topics, and is the technical owner of the z/OS migration documentation.
