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SAGE Outstanding Achievement AwardThis annual award goes to someone whose professional contributions to the system administration community over a number of years merit special recognition.
2008: Samba Team
The 2008 SAGE Outstanding Achievement Award goes to the Samba Team for the rich capabilities they've brought to system administrators and users in heterogeneous computing environments.
2007: Æleen FrischÆleen Frisch's achievements are no mystery to this audience. Her book Essential System Administration, now in its third edition, is on many of our shelves, and she had shown an untiring commitment to advancing the state of the art through tutorials and presentations around the world. A system administrator for over 20 years and the Program Chair of LISA '03, Æleen practices, writes, and teaches the critical analysis skills that for many of us have turned system administration from guesswork into a science.
2006: Tobias Oetiker and Dave RandBefore the creation of MRTG and RRDTool, the only people who could reap the benefits of long-term, historical statistics–gathering were people with multi-million-dollar budgets. MRTG and RRDTool democratized and therefore popularized historical data collection. As a result, network utilization planning has grown from guesswork into a fine art. These tools are also used to track a wide array of resources, from disk I/O stats, to CPU and memory usage, to license server data. Thanks to Tobias, Dave, and their team, system and network administrators are no longer limited to fire-fighting when resources are overloaded. We can now easily examine network and system data, presented in an intuitive form, to predict and plan for upgrades months in advance of dire necessity. 2005: Tom Limoncelli and Christine HoganFor The Practice of System and Network Administration. Published in 2001, their book continues to be cited frequently by the SAGE community as a topical work. The book advances the profession by advancing the administrator from a technically competent individual to a professional system administrator. 2004: Brent ChapmanFor his contributions to firewalls, mailing lists, and the community. 2003: Two AwardsEric Anderson, Paul Anderson, Mark Burgess, and Alva CouchFor professional contributions to the field of system administration through their ground-breaking work in system administration theory. As they practice it, system administration theory is a useful, emerging academic subdiscipline in which all four have been working for years. Lee DamonFor service to SAGE and to the profession as a whole. Lee has published several USENIX papers, has been the Guru-Is-In coordinator for multiple conferences, chaired both the SAGE Code of Ethics working group and the Policies working group, and contributed to the SAGE Security working group. 2002No award was given in 2002. 2001: Hal PomeranzFor his exemplary contributions as an educator of system administrators, through works such as the Perl Practicum series, and for his years of leadership in the system administration community. 2000: Celeste Stokelyor her pioneering achievements in distributing systems management information. 1999: Wietse VenemaFor his continuing work to help improve computer security through the development of system administration tools. 1998: Tina DarmohrayFor her dedication and tireless efforts to promote understanding and recognition of the System Administration profession. 1997: Paul VixieFor work on BIND and for ongoing efforts to eliminate spam email from the Internet. 1996: Elizabeth ZwickyFor her role in founding SAGE. 1995: Evi NemethFor her contributions to the system administration and student community. 1994: Larry WallFor his work on Perl and other system administration tools. 1993: Max Vasilatos and Rob KolstadFor their role in organizing the early LISA conferences, and for general contributions to the system administration community. |
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