Marco Tiggelaar

Marco Tiggelaar, according to his LInkedIn profile, is an information technology (IT) professional who owns a company called Key4ce in Eindhoven Area, Netherlands; his particular inclinations focus on solving problems related to complex computer technologies, IT security, and IT management.
Travels and migration
Tiggelaar, a Dutch national, was educated in Grafisch Lyceum Eindhoven. He describes himself as "self employed for over 10 years and active all around the world".
Career summary
* Microsoft Professional and *Nix Contributor. (Note: is an alternative reference to the phrase "Unix-like operating system".)
Contributions to the software community
Tiggelaar is a recognized Microsoft Partner. Microsoft's MSDN website says that a company or individual receives a Microsoft Partner affiliation when one is part of the Microsoft Partner Network. As Microsoft Partner, Tiggelaar and his company Key4ce enjoy beta-testing privileges and advance knowledge about new Microsoft products before their release to the general public; in addition, he also receives better support from Microsoft.
His contributions at MSDN have been mostly in the form of replies to technical issues raised by users of Microsoft products. Among the issues he has handled are related to WebsitePanel, Microsoft.NET, ASP.Net, MySQL, phpMyAdmin, Lync 2010, multiple website creation, design approaches, shared SSL folders, hosting space, and license keys.
Marco Tiggelaar has actively involved in open-source software development, and his contributions can be found in projects like: Zen Load Balancer, osTicket WP Bridge (a WordPress plugin), WebsitePanel (a tool for automating an enterprise hosting service), and VirtualPF.
Tiggelaar has spent time to raise up technical issues he uncovered while in the course of testing certain software products, for example: MailCleaner Anti Spam Community Edition.
VirtualPF - the free firewall product
It is reported in the VirtualPF website that the virtualized firewall project started in The Netherlands in 2014. Intended to be an enhancement of original source code of the open-source software pfSense, VirtualPF became a fork of pfSense instead, because Marco Tiggelaar and the developers of pfSense were unable to agree on the issue about licenses.
 
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