Jeroen Massar

Curriculum Vitae

This page contains my current resume. If you want more information don't hesitate to contact me.
This CV can be found at http://unfix.org/~jeroen/cv/.

Copyright Notice
This CV is copyright Jeroen Massar, 1996-2008. You may not modify this CV. You may not distribute this CV to other parties without my express, written permission. In particular, I do not wish to be represented by any agency or third party and consent only to the use and distribution of this CV for the purposes of the immediate position(s) for which I have applied. If you have received this CV from an agent purporting to represent me, please contact me at my email address.

Personalia

Image of Jeroen Massar
NameJeroen Remon Massar
E-Mailjeroen@unfix.org
City Of BirthGouda, Netherlands
SexMale
NationalityDutch (NL)
Marital StatusTaken

Languages

Nederlands (Dutch)mother tongue
Englishwritten and spoken
Deutsch (German)written and spoken
Français (French)understood

Employment

2004-current IBM Zurich Research Laboratory

Switzerland Rüschlikon (ZH), Switzerland

Network performance profiling, testing and monitoring; IPv6 Deployment


1999-2000 Cistron Internet Services

Netherlands Alphen a/d Rijn, Netherlands

Part-time designer and programmer of internet related software products.

  • Windows CD-based automatic installation kit
  • Debian GNU/Linux developer

1998-2003 Erasmus Medical Centre (formerly Academisch Hospital Rotterdam / AZR), Dijkzigt Ziekenhuis, Thoraxcentre, Department of Cardiology

Netherlands Rotterdam, Netherlands

Part-time job doing many different design and programming projects and continueing my internship project.

  • MUMPS Database Programs
  • Thorax Utility System API (TusAPI): A Windows interface to the TUS system which runs on MUMPS
  • GUI programs based on TusAPI
  • Research for a new Heartlungmachine interface
  • PiSi: Philips Rontgen to Siemens Cathor interface
  • Dosemetrie calculation program
  • Many other small projects

Achievements

Award of Excellence in the Implementation Category of the 2004 Edition of the IPv6 Application Contest

Date:November 2004
Where:IPv6 Promotion Council of Japan
Image:http://gallery.unfix.org/jeroen/aiccu.jpg
URL:http://www.v6pc.jp/apc2004/en/awards.html
Abstract: AICCU is a tool for making it very easy to allow users to start using IPv6, even though there is no native connectivity available yet. The award was granted in recognition of this contribution to the advancement of the IPv6 Internet.

Projects

The IPng.nl and SixXS projects are executed together with Pim van Pelt.

Unfix Multitude of computer related projects (1998-current)
Unfix is basically my digital playground, a place for me to store my online interests. It mainly is used for email, which I find very important and of course a presence in the internet, which for most people means a website.

SixXS IPv6 deployment for LIR's (2001-ongoing)
SixXS (Six Access) is a service targeted mainly at Local Internet Registries (LIR's) based in the RIPE regions. The target is to create a common forum to help company engineers find their way with IPv6 networks. This service accommodates an enhanced version of the IPng tunnel broker to assist these LIR's to have a rapid IPv6 deployment in their organisation by providing a native and tunneled IPv6 broker, giving IPv6 access to their clients. SixXS offers the RIPE, ARIN, APNIC and LACNIC communities pre-production deployment expertise based on the experience gathered while running the IPng Tunnel Broker. SixXS also offers a large number of PoPs for endusers of which their upstreams are not IPv6 capable yet.

IPng.nl IPv6 deployment for endusers (2000-2004)
IPng, which stands for IP Next Generation, and which is a different name for the global IPv6 network that was being deployed. IPng was the predecessor of SixXS. The project was ended in July 2004 after migrating the users to other SixXS PoPs which where in RIR instead of 6BONE address space.
  • Website
  • Traffic, user and usage statistics.
  • Development, implementation, maintainance and operations of the project.
  • User interaction and communication, setting up tunnels/subnets/dns
  • Promoting, testing and development of IPv6 deployment

Publications

A Light-Weight and Scalable Network Profiling System

By:Andreas Kind, Paul Hurley and Jeroen Massar (IBM Zurich Research Laboratory)
Date:January 2005
Publisher:ERCIM News No. 60
URL:http://www.ercim.org/publication/Ercim_News/enw60/kind.html
Abstract: Long-term network monitoring in high-speed networks requires new ways for collecting, storing and analyzing flow-based network traffic information. A project at the IBM Zurich Research Laboratory looked at alternatives to the conventional flow-based network profiling approach with the objective of improved scalability for high flow rates. The result is a light-weight and scalable network profiling system for NetFlow and IPFIX that is based on a novel time series aggregation database.

Internships

1996
(6 months)
Erasmus Medical Centre (formerly Academisch Hospital Rotterdam / AZR), Dijkzigt Ziekenhuis, Thoraxcentre, Department of Cardiology

Netherlands Rotterdam, Netherlands

Programming of multiple MUMPS database related applicaties and research and implementation for a connection between the Thorax Utility System (TUS) running MUMPS and Windows based computers with a GUI.This interface became TusAPI of which I continued development after my internship finished.

1997
(6 months)
Microsoft Holland

Netherlands Hoofddorp, Netherlands

Design and implementation of the test laboratorium network for the PSS (Product Support Services) department in the Netherlands

2004
(6 months)
IBM Zurich Research Laboratory

Switzerland Rüschlikon (ZH), Switzerland

Network and performance testing and monitoring


Connected using IPv4 from 38.103.63.61
Last Revision: Mon 29 September 2008 00:15:42 CEST ©1978-2008 Jeroen Massar <jeroen@unfix.org>