Dan Kuykendall is the CTO and Co-CEO at NT OBJECTives. Dan is a founder of NT OBJECTives and has been with the company for more than 10 years. He is responsible for the strategic direction and development of products and services and works closely with technology partners to make sure integrations are both deep and valuable. As a result of Dan’s dedication to security, technology innovation and software development, NTO application security scanning software is often recognized as the most accurate because of its sophisticated automation techniques. Dan joined NT OBJECTives from Foundstone, where he was responsible for the portal interface to the company’s flagship product, FoundScan. Prior to Foundstone, Dan was the founder of the Information Security team in the United States branches of Fortis.
Dan is a regular blogger on web application security issues on ManVsWebApp.com and co-hosts An Information Security Place Podcast. His has presented on the topics of mobile and application security at many of the top security industry conferences such as ISSA (2011), B-Sides (2012-2013), OWASP AppSecUSA (2012), HouSecCon (2010-2012), ToorCon (2013) and THOTCON (2013). Dan has been involved with Web Application Security Consortium and is a regular contributor to many open source development projects including founding the RPM Builder, phpGroupWare and podPress projects.
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Very, very impressive, 3rd grade and creating stories with animation software like that. It’s even featured on the software website. My son is five, but I doubt he’d be able to do that in a couple of years. We let him watch a childrens’ series every few days (we don’t have a TV yet, but might have to change that because of school), but he’s not spending much time in front of the screen. We don’t want to raise a couch potato, but being an IT manager myself I’ll make sure he learns how to type and use office before he gets to school. I suppose you son has more space in that respect?
Very, very impressive, 3rd grade and creating stories with animation software like that. It’s even featured on the software website. My son is five, but I doubt he’d be able to do that in a couple of years. We let him watch a childrens’ series every few days (we don’t have a TV yet, but might have to change that because of school), but he’s not spending much time in front of the screen. We don’t want to raise a couch potato, but being an IT manager myself I’ll make sure he learns how to type and use office before he gets to school. I suppose you son has more space in that respect?