Martin Stut's Blog

Random Notes about Information Technology

About me

My name is Martin Stut. I live in Marburg, Germany and am married to Marion. After studying Computer Science at the Technical University of Munich, I have been working since 1991 as an IT expert at the Deutscher Gemeinschafts-Diakonieverband in Marburg. Since 2015, I have been operating a small IT business (stut-it.net), so I am available for services.

Since 1982, I am a Christian, which means that I believe in Jesus Christ, the son of God. He loves me so much that he took the punishment for my wrongdoings (and everyone’s who is willing to accept that) by dying on the cross. Because Jesus has risen from the dead, he is the way to a bright future: eternal life. Jesus taught us to love each other and to spread his Good News (a.k.a. The Gospel). Thus I am continuously looking for ways to help others spread the good news – „to serve the servants“. God gave me some understanding of information technology, therefore I am helping Christian organizations to plan, set up and maintain their networks, websites etc.

When planning IT systems, I take care to keep them simple and manageable. This could mean that not all technological possibilities are used, but the reward is a system where everyone involved knows what it does and why it is doing what it is doing. In the long run, this simplicity saves a lot of work – one Lutheran convent with about 40 client PCs manages with only one day per month of assistance. Users are therefore willing to drop little extras.

Often, such simple and manageable systems can be set up from components that are freely available in source code, so-called Open Source Software. I prefer to use servers with Debian Linux. The Samba file service has been well tested and reliably communicates with Windows clients. Dovecot IMAP servers are replacing large parts of the mail functionality of Exchange at a small fraction of the effort. NextCloud serves to coordinate cross-site files, appointments and tasks in a team.

CV

Experience

broad rather than deep

It aligns with the need of

  • Christian organizations with 2-50 PC clients in various fields of activity
  • Mission organizations
    • programming client frontends for encryption and antivirus installation
    • research and testing products for applications and related to security