Dr. Wieland graduated from the Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine in 1981. He works in Salisbury, MD and 1 other location and specializes in Cardiovascular Disease. Dr. Wieland is affiliated with Atlantic General Hospital and Peninsula Regional Medical Center.
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Senior Devops Engineer
Alphapoint, Corp. Nov 12, 2018 - May 2019
Techops Engineer
Lendingtree Aug 2016 - Nov 2018
Senior Devops Engineer
Scana Corporation Dec 2013 - Aug 2016
Infrastructure Analyst
Scana Corporation May 2009 - Dec 2013
Database Analyst
Education:
University of South Carolina 2004 - 2008
Bachelors, Bachelor of Science, Computer Information Systems, Business, Information Systems
Swartz Creek High School
Skills:
Vrealize Automation Vmware Esx Chef Vrealize Orchestrator Microsoft Sql Server Vrealize Operations Manager Powershell C# T Sql Asp.net Asp.net Mvc Vrealize Log Insight Process Automation .Net Vb.net Sensu Scalr Vmware Powercli Jenkins Ruby Saltstack Amazon Web Services Ecs Kubernetes Cloud Management Virtualization .Net Core New Relic Serverless Computing Grafana Mongodb Elastic Stack Microsoft Azure Aws Lambda Terraform Python Containerization Scripting
Interests:
Web Design Investing Tv Shows Golf Movies
Languages:
English Spanish
Certifications:
License D250-5143 License C078-6021 License Vcp5-Dv Microsoft Certified It Professional: Database Administrator 2008 Microsoft Certified It Professional: Database Administrator on Sql Server 2005 Vmware Certified Professional – Data Center Virtualization
"With more than 39 million people who are blind, and over 246 million who have a severe visual impairment, many people may feel excluded from the conversation around photos on Facebook,"Facebook's Shaomei Wu, Hermes Pique, and Jeffrey Wieland said in a post.
Date: Apr 06, 2016
Category: Sci/Tech
Source: Google
How Facebook is helping the blind 'see' pictures their friends share online
available for the English-language version of Facebooks main iOS app at launch -- and it will only recognize around 100 basic concepts because Facebook only wants to suggest that an image contains things its artificial intelligence tech has a good track record of identifying, according Jeffrey Wieland,