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Our Projects

Consulting Projects

  • Senior consultant to a large Canadian & multinational enterprise for policy and procedure development and documentation, server standards, server security, software installation standards and automation, network configuration automation, server monitoring, etc.
  • Senior consultant to a global Fortune 100 financial firm, providing system administration, incident response and analysis/reporting, procedures documentation and refinement, and a small amount of team leadership.

ISP / Server / Network Projects

  • Paonia.com – Paonia, Colorado USA
  • Telluride Wireless – Telluride, Colorado USA
  • M&V Commsat – Luanda, Angola
  • Access Point Communications – Umuahia, Nigeria
  • One of the largest private telecoms in Lagos, Nigeria
  • SAWTNET – Oran, Algeria

Software Projects

Notable software written by Angelo Babudro, listed in order from the most recent to oldest.

  • Don's Directory: A web-based database application with separate public and administrative sites. If you would like to see a demonstration of the administrative site, which includes subscriber management, a wide range of reporting (including activity reports for the public site), inventory, order entry, invoicing, accounts receivable, etc. please contact us.
  • Stapler: DNS management tool
  • Turnstile: Firewall using ipchains
  • Webilant: A web content filter using squid and created with Biblical morals in mind
  • What Vehicle History?, a preventive maintenance and equipment tracking package for MS-DOS that was trusted by large and small companies, including the US Navy and NJSEA (Giants Stadium).
  • What Mailing List?, a powerful mailing list management and printing programme that prints bar codes on labels or directly on envelopes and can handle lists big and small with speed and ease. For MS-DOS, used by large and small companies, including the United States's President's Working Group on the Family which kept a list of tens of thousands of names using WML back in the early 1990s (when hard disks were in megabytes and a 20MHz 80386 processor with 1MB of RAM was about the fastest machine commonly available).