(no subject)
Dec. 5th, 2005 02:51 amTop 10 System Administrator Truths
It had me at #1 – Users Lie.
#1 – Users Lie
Good techies often wont lie about mistakes, thats the one thing I have noticed about techies as opposed to non-techies. A little background: I currently work as a security guard, a usually non-technical job, but since I do it at a high security datacenter for the Worlds Largest Software Company, it gets kinda techinical sometimes, and besides, its a stopgap job. But anyway, when a techie makes a mistake, liek sets off an alarm or gets trapped because they didint swipe their badge, they admit so, and we fix it and move on. But when the non-technical types are around, like the marketing people, or execs from outside datacenter services, they often will try to feign ignorance of the cause of their problems. Of course, this is giving them the benifit of the doubt and assuming that they can figure out what they did wrong.
#3 – Printers Suck
I have accepted this, in my domain, printers are depreciated, hell, even paper is depreciated. Thusly, at home my printer lives in my closet, holding up a stack of Netware 4.11 books.
#4 – Cleanliness is Godliness
Every time a system is brought down for any reason, out comes the canned air. I hate dust with a passion.
#5 – Backups are Crucial
I was annoyed to find that Retrospect isint available for Linux. But then again, Ill prolly stick to xfsdump and scripts.
#7 – No One Ever Got Fired For Buying Microsoft
Unless you work at Novell ;). Sometimes even at Microsoft, its own software isint the right solution.
#9 – Know Your Needs
Even as a firm beliver in Linux I must say that its not the holy-grail of adaptable OSes. But then again, the only Windows server I have is called MCSE, and you can probably guess what its used for.
It had me at #1 – Users Lie.
#1 – Users Lie
Good techies often wont lie about mistakes, thats the one thing I have noticed about techies as opposed to non-techies. A little background: I currently work as a security guard, a usually non-technical job, but since I do it at a high security datacenter for the Worlds Largest Software Company, it gets kinda techinical sometimes, and besides, its a stopgap job. But anyway, when a techie makes a mistake, liek sets off an alarm or gets trapped because they didint swipe their badge, they admit so, and we fix it and move on. But when the non-technical types are around, like the marketing people, or execs from outside datacenter services, they often will try to feign ignorance of the cause of their problems. Of course, this is giving them the benifit of the doubt and assuming that they can figure out what they did wrong.
#3 – Printers Suck
I have accepted this, in my domain, printers are depreciated, hell, even paper is depreciated. Thusly, at home my printer lives in my closet, holding up a stack of Netware 4.11 books.
#4 – Cleanliness is Godliness
Every time a system is brought down for any reason, out comes the canned air. I hate dust with a passion.
#5 – Backups are Crucial
I was annoyed to find that Retrospect isint available for Linux. But then again, Ill prolly stick to xfsdump and scripts.
#7 – No One Ever Got Fired For Buying Microsoft
Unless you work at Novell ;). Sometimes even at Microsoft, its own software isint the right solution.
#9 – Know Your Needs
Even as a firm beliver in Linux I must say that its not the holy-grail of adaptable OSes. But then again, the only Windows server I have is called MCSE, and you can probably guess what its used for.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-05 11:32 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-05 11:38 am (UTC)But generally its not best to create negativity in your environment, most people don't like it.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-05 02:40 pm (UTC)This is tech support. Bring the sarcasm.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-05 06:45 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-05 12:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-05 04:13 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-05 04:28 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-05 06:12 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-05 10:46 pm (UTC)Seriously, how long have you worked in support?
no subject
Date: 2005-12-06 12:30 pm (UTC)I have a "job" that pays the rent. I also help people with their computers in my spare time. I charge them in alcohol. It works out pretty nicely. I enjoy the friendship, the booze and helping people with my knowledge.
I guess I could be a dick about what I do, but what's the point. Seriously folks...trained monkeys could do our jobs. It's not like we're that indispensible.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-05 12:10 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-05 07:37 pm (UTC)ARP chaches
DNS caches
along with (usually):
resetting the software driver's packet buffer
resetting the NIC's hardware packet buffer if it has one.
resetting the DHCP lease. (unless your DHCP server has a "give me a lease for 30 days" crap, which leads to all sorts of fun and games when you have to kick the DHCP server...)
See? a cold restart does all sorts of good. XP's "repair connection" flushes the packet buffers and the ARP and DNS caches, along with the routing table (yes, NT systems do have a routing table built into them, just like the BSD unix from which it was spawned from)
no subject
Date: 2005-12-05 01:19 pm (UTC)Are you allowed to admit that without being sent back to
brainwashing"advocacy" camp?no subject
Date: 2005-12-05 01:53 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-05 02:10 pm (UTC)