Humbled
One of the things that is making this transition to Check Point Software easier is the community of people that support, use, and sell what used to be called Firewall-1, but now goes by a few different names and offers many more functions than just firewalling and VPNs. It’s a community I have never really left, having spent the last decade in Nokia’s Security Appliance Business, but it’s one I was less visible in over the past several years.
Despite being less visible in recent years, I have still been contributing, albeit indirectly. I have been maintaining Nokia’s knowledge base, which of course contains many articles that relate to Check Point. I haven’t written many Check Point-related articles in recent years, but I do work to make sure that the articles other folks in support write are readable. I also help our team out in various, sundry capacities, with the goal being to get customer issues resolved quickly.
In the course of this work, and my presence on many a social network, I run across the occasional person who thanks me for the contribution I made to the betterment of the Check Point community many years ago. As I re-engage in the community, the accolades have noticeably increased.
Meanwhile, Kellman Meghu, a SE manager for Check Point Software in Canada, recently gave a troubleshooting presentation for CPX 2009 in Las Vegas (CPX, or Check Point Experience, is their annual trade show). In the presentation, he apparently decided to use a picture of me to represent when things got hairy and you needed expert advice from support.
Kellman tweeted the following yesterday:
Used a picture of @PhoneBoy in his presentation. The crowd cheered; no one has forgotten the help he has provided to CP users.
To say I was touched and humbled is an understatement.
So what now? Hard to make any grand plans under the circumstances, but I’m keeping busy. I’m still running the FireWall-1 Gurus mailing list and participating on the CPUG Forums, helping out where I can. It’s not much, but until the deal between Nokia and Check Point closes, it’s difficult to do much else.