Dan spent 12 years in the military as a fighter jet mechanic before transitioning to a career in technology as a Software/DevOps Engineer/Manager. He’s now the Chief Architect at the National Association of Insurance Commissioners. He’s leading the technical and cultural transformation for the NAIC, a non-profit focused on consumer protection in the insurance industry. Dan is also an organizer of the DevOps KC Meetup and the DevOpsDays KC conference.
Dan Bergh Johnsson, Daniel Deogun, and Daniel Sawano are authors of the book Secure by Design and have collectively been working with security and development for several decades. They are developers at heart and understand that security is often a side-concern. They’ve also evolved work habits that enable them to develop systems in a way that promotes security while focusing on high-quality design habits – something that’s easier for developers to keep in mind during their daily work. All are established international speakers and often present at conferences on topics regarding high-quality development and security.
UX engineer, product manager, ex-lead of web dev at @apartmentscom, stealth startup owner and advisor.
Daniel Bryant is the Head of Developer Relations at Ambassador Labs. His technical expertise focuses on ‘DevOps’ tooling, cloud/container platforms, and microservice implementations. Daniel is a long-time coder, platform engineer, and Java Champion who contributes to several open source projects. He also writes for InfoQ, O’Reilly, and The New Stack, and regularly presents at international conferences such as KubeCon, QCon, and JavaOne. In his copious amounts of free time, he enjoys running, reading, and traveling.
Dan Bergh Johnsson, Daniel Deogun, and Daniel Sawano are authors of the book Secure by Design and have collectively been working with security and development for several decades. They are developers at heart and understand that security is often a side-concern. They’ve also evolved work habits that enable them to develop systems in a way that promotes security while focusing on high-quality design habits – something that’s easier for developers to keep in mind during their daily work. All are established international speakers and often present at conferences on topics regarding high-quality development and security.
Dan is a veteran of the dotcom bubble, and has been variously a system administrator, university lecturer, start-up founder, and day labourer. As a member of the Devopsdays Core team, he has had the privilege of speaking and keynoting at events around the world. Today, he is a Developer Advocate at Datadog, a role that mixes two of his great passions: measuring things, and talking about measuring things.
Dan Bergh Johnsson, Daniel Deogun, and Daniel Sawano are authors of the book Secure by Design and have collectively been working with security and development for several decades. They are developers at heart and understand that security is often a side-concern. They’ve also evolved work habits that enable them to develop systems in a way that promotes security while focusing on high-quality design habits – something that’s easier for developers to keep in mind during their daily work. All are established international speakers and often present at conferences on topics regarding high-quality development and security.
Daphne Chong is a Software Engineer at Amazon in Seattle, and has been building software in Engineering and Architecture roles for over ten years in the US, UK and Australia. Previously, she was a Technical Lead in the API and Backend Services team at the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) in Sydney. She is an active member of local development communities, including organizing for Women Who Code Sydney, volunteering at GovHack, and local kids’ coding workshops. Daphne tweets at @daphnechong, blogs on daphnechong.com, and loves to travel!
Dave is a software engineer who adopted a more peaceful role on the Product team at PagerDuty. Before PagerDuty, Dave worked in cloud computing at Microsoft (Windows Azure) and at Amazon.com launching their Grocery business. Frequently, he wonders which is scarier: being on-call during an outage or being a parent. The debate continues.