About the Speaker:Brian started with IBM Rochester
in 1988 as a programmer in what is now part of Global Services
supporting IBM Rochester's internal engineering tracking systems.
Shortly thereafter, he supported the Mechanical Design Automation
(MDA) software namely CATIA. In this role, he led the effort of
migrating the development tools from the MVS operating system to
an AIX based workstation solution. This provided him with a solid
background of different operating systems and also working closely
with customers (the designers).
In 1997, Brian joined the OS/400 security team initially focusing
on security aspects of what was then Operations Navigator. He has
also designed portions of security auditing in V5R3 of i5/OS namely
the QAUDLVL2 implementation. Since V5R1 he has been responsible
for delivering the Kerberos Protocol via Network Authentication
Service.
In V5R3 of i5/OS, a Kerberos server running in PASE was also delivered.
In V5R2, a number of components enabled their interfaces to use
Kerberos authentication which was instrumental in providing
a Single Sign-on
solution for our customers. The Kerberos Protocol along with Enterprise
Identity Mapping (EIM) provides our customers an avenue towards
password elimination.
Currently, he is working on furthering the Single Sign-on support
to other IBM products.
Brian has a B.S. in Applied Mathematics from the University of
Wisconsin-Stout. He has talked at COMMON and various user groups
about Kerberos and Single Sign-on. In his spare time, Brian enjoys
coaching his kids athletic teams, umpiring high school baseball
and softball, and cheering on America's team - The Green Bay Packers.
Brian can be reached at krings@us.ibm.com
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