Steve Goldfarb brings over 20 years experience designing and implementing IT, communications, audiovisual, and security systems for health care/pharmaceutical, commercial, industrial, broadcast, government and academic facilities. With particular expertise in project management, Steve leads project teams in the design and implementation of large, complex technology systems and infrastructures enabling clients to obtain the necessary systems and architecture in support of their business and technology objectives. Wide-reaching solutions for clients ranging from the US Navy, Boeing, Dow Jones, Merrill Lynch, QVC Network, Cigna Insurance, Merck & Co, and the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania have included cabling systems, data centers, networks, voice systems, VoIP, call centers, EOCs, NOCs, BAS networks, process networks, courtroom systems, audiovisual control systems, videoconferencing, classroom technology, public address, video signage/display, access control systems, closed, circuit television (CCTV) intrusion detection & monitoring and command centers. He has provided infrastructure design for campus-wide fiber-optic infrastructure at West Point Military Academy and for various new campus buildings at Burlington County Community College and New Jersey Institute of Technology. In addition, Steve has managed multiple project teams for the design of Rutgers University campus-wide Internet II initiative that included new telecommunications rooms, fiber and copper campus outside plant distribution, plus horizontal distribution systems for both classroom and dormitory. Goldfarb studied management at Drexel University and electrical engineering at Temple University. He obtained his Registered Communications Distribution Designer (RCDD) certification from BICSI in 1990 and his InfoComm International Certified Technology Specialist (CTS) certification in 2002. He is an active Extra class radio operator, has directed the LAN course for the Instrument Society of America for several years, and was a keynote speaker at the January 2000 BICSI conference. Steve contributes his expertise to IT and audiovisual industry trade organizations and publications as a lecturer and writer. |