Timothy
Brown (President and Senior Consultant) – A professional
developer for over 15 years, Tim is also recognized as an expert
in biometric technology and network security. Tim is the technical
author for the Human Authentication Application Programmers Interface
(HAAPI) and a primary force on the development board of the BioAPI.
He continues to contribute to the evolution of the programmers interfaces
in the biometrics arena through his valued work with the BioAPI
Consortium and the BioAPI Reference Implementation Working Groups.
His development expertise ranges from high level GUI and middle-ware
design and development to low level device interaction.
Tracy Copes (Managing Partner/Creative Director)
– As Creative Director,
Tracy brings versatility and flexibility to life at Daft Generation.
Over 15 years experience in the design field afford her valuable
knowledge which blends her keen design sense and limitless creativity
to make every project a successful one. Her creative abilities
and experience spans from print, corporate identity and traditional
advertising to multimedia, Web design, photography, illustration
and fine art. Each client with whom she partners, she crafts strategic
and media-integrated concepts into creative, eye-catching campaigns
that see positive results. Before forming Daft Generation she
was Art Director for McShane Communications in Tampa, FL and prior
to her move south, Art Director for Gura Labar & Associates
in Washington, D.C. She has received several Awards of Excellence
for various marketing and design campaigns over the years. As
a reputable arts and community advocate, she has produced the
promotional and collateral materials for the Earth Charter Community
Summit's, curated an Art Exhibit benefit for the Earth Charter,
that featured 14 local artists and 2 internationally acclaimed
artists, has worked with Equality Florida, The Human Rights Task
Force, Dogs Deserve Better and The Mendez Foundation. She has
also shown her private fine art at local Tampa galleries and has
had photos published in both Watermark and The Tampa Tribune.