Who am I?

Hey there, my name is Jovanni Hernandez. Web Developer, Information Technologist & aspiring Security Professional with an knack for problem solving in rapidly progressive environments. Graduate student at Baltimore’s Johns Hopkins University, Whiting School of Engineering and Alumni of Philadelphia’s Drexel University, Goodwin College of Technology and Professional Studies. Over 10 years experience as a technical specialist fulfilling facets of systems, network, and database administration, in addition to web programming. Security & privacy news junkie and active open sourced software lover. Avid fitness monkey, volleyball player, and rookie motorcyclist. 

I’m currently seeking an Information Assurance internship for the summer of 2013 at a federal agency or national laboratory. My professional interests include network security, digital forensics, security operations engineering, and online privacy.

If you care to know more about me, feel free to stalk my Google+, the profile is public although I don’t use it much, or just get in contact with me on the contact page. You can also check out my portfolio to see a very limited selection of previous work, or check out my resume. I’m also a big fan of networking on LinkedIn, so feel free to add me  there, my email address is [email protected]

Recent Posts

  • Acquiring Android Forensic Images

    As most of my posts, this one comes out of frustration while trying to acquire an Android forensic image of a new(er) device. Most of the information I was finding online dealt with older versions of Android running YAFFS or older versions of EXT. In my case, I wanted to [...] Read more »

    Building Autopsy 3 on Ubuntu with EXT4 Support

    In this post I will show you how to build Brian Carrier’s forensic tool Autopsy 3, which is a frontend for the file system forensic analysis tool Sleuthkit. The current downloadable version does not support the EXT4 file system used in newer Linux operating systems, however there is a development [...] Read more »

    Creating Forensic Images of VMware Drives Using dcfldd

    This post comes from frustration of trying to to achieve this rather simple task, but not knowing how to go about it. Scenario: I’m doing forensics malware analysis on Cridex, so I ran the malware on a clean VM. I wanted to then create a forensics duplicate of the VM’s [...] Read more »