Broadcom - Irvine since 2011
L2 UNIX Support
AfterHoursMac & Locke FotoGrafix since 2009
Consultant/Owner
Konica Minolta Business Solutions Aug 2007 - May 2009
Sr. Application Specialist, Pre/Post Sales Engineer
SafeGuard Health Enterprises Dec 2006 - Aug 2007
UNIX System Administrator
Konica Minolta Business Solutions Mar 2003 - Dec 2006
Application Specialist
Education:
University of Phoenix 1997 - 1999
Zenger Miller Frontline Leadership 1997 - 1998
Golden West Colllege 1969 - 1971
Skills:
Troubleshooting Networking Software Documentation Disaster Recovery Unix Management Hardware Servers Technical Support Linux Telecommunications Enterprise Software Leadership System Administration Solution Selling Sales Cross Functional Team Leadership Sales Operations Security Testing Printers Windows 7 Document Management Marketing Training Computer Hardware Pre Sales Web Design Advertising Customer Service Change Management Network Administration Programming Saas Cloud Computing Project Management Integration Photography Mac Proposal Writing Product Management
Interests:
Graphic Design Unix Macintosh Photography Camping Video
Gregory Locke posted three photos to his Facebook page on Saturday evening showing the defaced subway car and people wiping away the hateful messages, using hand sanitizer to remove the permanent ink.
Date: Feb 07, 2017
Category: Health
Source: Google
An entire subway car came together to wash away swastikas scrawled everywhere
Thats how Gregory Locke described the mood on the car of the subway train he boarded Saturday night, as the passengers saw that swastikas and anti-Semitic statements had been drawn on every advertisement and on every window, Locke said in a Facebook post. One photo Locke posted showed the phrase
Date: Feb 05, 2017
Source: Google
A group of New Yorkers came together to remove swastikas from a subway car
Documented in a Facebook post by Gregory Locke, passengers in a Manhattan 1 train pooled resources to remove swastikas and hate speech from the train. According to Locke, swastikas had been drawn in Sharpie across every window and advertisement in the train car.