For The Record (FTR)
Daniel O'Connell has a strong background in programming and control system development. Daniel began their career in 2010 at Crestron Electronics as a Software Engineer, where they focused on C#/.Net code and framework development. Daniel worked in this role for nearly nine years, until March 2019.
After that, Daniel joined AVI-SPL as a Programmer in May 2019 and worked until April 2020. During their time at AVI-SPL, they further honed their programming skills.
In 2020, Daniel moved to SPECTRA Audio Design Group, where they served as a Programmer from July 2020 to August 2021.
Following SPECTRA Audio Design Group, they worked at Curtis Stout as a Programmer from September 2021 to November 2021.
Daniel'smost recent role is at For The Record (FTR), where they currently hold the position of Senior Control System Developer starting from November 2021.
Overall, Daniel has built a diverse skill set in programming and control system development throughout their career.
Daniel O'Connell has a Master's degree in Electrical and Electronics Engineering from the New Jersey Institute of Technology, which they obtained from 2009 to 2012. Prior to that, they also earned a Bachelor's degree in the same field from the same institute from 2005 to 2009. Daniel has also obtained additional certifications such as "C#: Delegates, Events and Lambdas" and "Programming Foundations: Design Patterns" from Lynda.com in October 2017.
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For The Record (FTR)
For the Record (FTR) assists courts around the world to capture, store and distribute court recordings and transcripts while also providing fast and secure access to attorneys, parties and court reporters. Their fully-managed solution and service models provide measurable improvements to digital court recording and management processes whileprotecting court governance with the highest level of security and control.By working alongside their customers, they’ve learned first-hand that quality audio is the key to success. It underpins the entire court recording lifecycle and is critical to the delivery of broadcast quality audio and video and a precise and fast transcript.