MASSÉ Tony

 

Born on May 5th 1977, in La Chatre (36) – France

 

Nationality : French

 

Marital status : Single

 

Address:

Tony MASSE

47, Roman Road

Colchester

Essex CO1 1UR

Great Britain

 

eMails:

masse_tony@yahoo.fr

tony.masse@wanadoo.fr

 

Phones :

Home: +44 1206 514 306 (Great Britain)

GSM: +44 78 113 422 08 (Great Britain)

GSM: +33 6 60 53 39 94 (France)

Fax: +33 6 61 66 00 14 (on the GSM)

Last online CV (Word, HTML and Flash – French and English): http://perso.wanadoo.fr/tony.masse/

Education

DUT Service et Réseaux de Communication
(Communication Services and Networks)

·        In Saint Raphaël, France, September 1997 to June 1999

Baccalauréat Professionnel Gestion et Comptabilité
(equivalent of A-levels: Accounting and Management)

CAP and BEP Administration Commerciale et Comptable
(Accounting and Commercial management)

Miscellaneous

            I am really fond of programming. I enjoy hiking, swimming and travelling in Europe.

            I was involved with a team of students of the maintenance of the web server of our college (web, mail, WAIS, NIS, FTP) and of a few computers room under UNIX at the "Université de Toulon et du Var" for 2 years.

In 1996, I co-founded the CERCLE (Delphi and programming laboratory) with a set of University teachers and students. This working group was aimed at researches and analyses on Delphi, algorithmics and components.


Professional Experience

IPP Technologies http://www.ipptechnologies.com/

Rightvision http://www.rightvision.com/

Earthport http://www.earthport.com/

Rightvision http://www.rightvision.com/

100% Linux http://www.100linux.com/

Meon Communication http://www.meon-com.fr/

Com’Online http://www.comonline.fr/

C.I.C.A. http://www.cica.fr/


Appendix

Earthport

http://www.earthport.com/

Earthport has developed and delivered the ep3 platform - a fully scalable processing engine comprising technology, software and infrastructure.

The platform is capable of supporting payment and transfer transactions and services in real time providing a cost effective off-line and online payment processing system in multiple currencies for cash, credit card and debit card payments.

The ep3 platform provides Virtual Account facilities for Clients which enables instantaneous and totally secure transfers of value to be undertaken between Clients and their customers in real time 24 hours a day.

A Virtual Account holds only cleared funds; there is no need for chargeback provision. Fraud, money laundering and non-repudiation issues are minimised by the ep3 closed loop system supporting the Virtual Account. Cleared funds can be derived from cash, credit cards, debit cards and other legacy payment methods.

Earthport's projected revenues are derived from licence, T&M, service and transaction fees from Clients using ep3 for their payment transactions processing.

Since April 2002 I have been Network Administrator the I.T. department of Earthport in Colchester:

 

 

Rightvision

http://www.rightvision.com/

Rightvision is specialised in designing and manufacturing All-in-one servers made to be easily inserted in the network of a company. The “Eye‑box”es. These “boxes” don’t have any complex physical interface as keyboard or monitor, but are equipped by a LCD screen and six buttons making the user/administrator able to navigate in the simplified menu of the machine. Configuration and maintenance are made via a graphical and secured interface (Web) reachable from any computer connected to the network and equipped by a Web Browser, or in Unix commands via the consol port.

Services proposed by Eye-boxes vary from one version to another. The following are examples of services available from the Eye-box One: Web server (Apache), Mail server (Sendmail), FTP server, files and printers sharing server for MS-Windows workstations (Samba), routing (boxes are equipped of two Ethernet port, one ISDN port and a Serial port for Leased Lines), VPN (based on Ipsec) and other needed to make well working the server itself (backup system, etc…).

From October 2000 to November 2001 I was Networking Engineer in the Second and Third level Technical support team of Rightvision in Sophia-Antipolis:

 

Technical, marketing and sales personalised following of resellers, mass retailers and large account customers

100% Linux

http://www.100linux.com/

In the beginning of 1999 the publisher Go Multimedia set up a restricted team of writers and designers with the goal to create a new magazine about the Linux operating system. The target of this future publication had to be large and touch from the occasional to semi-professional users. After a few month of work, the first issue went out and was a real success: more than four times the forecasts which equaled more than twenty two thousand copies were sold in the first month.

In the next twelve month, the magazine never went out of the Top 3 of the most sold Linux monthly magazines in France.

In spite of its commercial success, the magazine ceased to be published in the end of September 2000, after the decision of publisher.

From July 1999 to September 2000, I wrote articles for the monthly French magazine "100% Linux". In the beginning I used to write alone with the Chief-editor, and then with a complete team of writers. This magazine had its head office in Paris for France, Belgium and other French speaking European countries. I was the only writer on the very first issues, but from the beginning of 2000 my work became more concentrated on a few specific subjects such as "Fiches techniques" (technical cards), "Pas a pas" (step by step learning) and "Dossiers " (Special Reports). In this last part I was responsible for the whole editorial contents.

Meon Communication

http://www.meon-com.fr/

 

The project finished to evolve in the middle of the year 1997. I funded Meon Communication in September.

The activity of Meon Communication was essentially around the Web and connected services. It purposed since 1997 unlimited hosting to its customer and interactive Web site development (Macromedia Flash). As at this epoch, few companies risked them to have a corporate Web site   made with these technologies, a lot of our productions were destined to cover events or product launches.

Annexed activities, about more than 70% of turnover but less than 40% of the benefits, were the sales of computing and network equipments, and associated services (maintenance, network cabling, etc…)

From October 1997 to December 2000 I worked in my own firm Meon Communication (St Raphaël, Antibes, Cagnes sur Mer and Monaco):

Com’Online

http://www.comonline.fr/

Formerly named Pacer Europe (European headquarters of the American company Pacer), Com’Online was specialised in the creation and the sale of software integrating micro-computers like Macintosh and PC to Unix networks. The product range included Unix terminal emulators, files/printers sharing systems, X servers, routers, interconnection servers, etc…

My very first jobs were to set working the technical units, to define the technically and financially needs and limits of the project, then to imagine the new range of products (mainly oriented to Internet and telecommuting technologies).

From February 1997 to October 1997 at Com'Online (Sophia Antipolis and Le Cannet):

C.I.C.A.

http://www.cica.fr/

The C.I.C.A. is the property of Conseil Général des Alpes Maritimes (General Council of the department of Alpes Maritimes) but the management is delegated to a private company. The goal of this “nursery” of companies is to help the local development of SME working within the framework of the new technologies of telecommunication.

I was in the technical team of the managing company.

From December 1996 to February 1997 at Centre International de Communication Avancé (C.I.C.A): International Centre of Advanced Communication (Sophia Antipolis):

Training periods

5 months (plurality of periods from June 1994 to February 1997) of training period during BEP and BAC :