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tomapot posted:From two pages back but chiming in to one-up you. Some departments in my company either have Radio Disney or sappy Disney tunes for the on-hold music. Nothing like "zippity-doo-dah" blasting through a conference call. All conference calls that reach the 30 minute mark should automatically be interrupted by Zippity Doo Dah.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 00:48 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 11:04 |
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So far today I've: - Watched a sever load test for an hour or so - Rebooted several production servers for kernel patching - Fixed a server whose NFS exports from our SAN got un-exported suddenly - Did some poo poo that I don't even know to fix a corrupted Lotus Domino names.nsf file (I don't know a goddamn thing about Domino, but our Domino admin isn't a Domino admin and also doesn't know a thing about Unix, so :welp: ) - Cleaned up some Oracle archive logs before a filesystem filled up - Actively watched our monitoring system for 12 hours Only four more hours of monitoring and a dozen more reboots to go, then I can try to get a few hours of sleep before getting up at 4AM to do more server reboots, and then assuming that doesn't break anything, maybe a couple more hours of sleep before I start another 16-hour monitoring shift. Then it's just five work days left till the weekend (when I'll be rebooting yet more servers, hooray... )
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 01:26 |
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JohnnyCanuck posted:It's why I still use an actual client, rather than just the webapps. Group chat is what I was using it for >.< Didn't know they did an actual client but sounds like it would not be useful to me. I guess I'm to have to run gtalk under IE or something sick like that. (I refuse to allow Chrome on my system)
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 02:04 |
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SubjectVerbObject posted:The best ticket I ever saw needs a little explaining. The ticket itself was an escalation to a developer regarding an issue with switch hook flash not working a certain Japanese version of a Commercial phone switch. If you translate switch hook flash into Japanese, but use English characters (not sure what that is called) switch hook flash becomes switchero fukko. What they did was transliterate the English words "switch hook flash" phonetically into Japanese, using the set of phonetic characters called katakana, which are frequently used to transliterate words from non-Japanese languages. Here is a handy chart. See where it says "Hu/Fu" on the first chart? That's the closest approximation to the first sound in the word "hook" you can get in katakana; there isn't a distinction made between the "hu" and "fu" sounds. One Japanese-speaker probably transliterated "hook" into katakana as フック, and then a different one transliterated it back into English. I studied Japanese in college dennyk posted:
We have a monitoring system. Watching it is part of my job. I work on a team where there are (in theory) at least 6 people watching it at all times. The thought of trying to do that by myself... I'm so sorry.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 02:52 |
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GreenNight posted:New user: I need my mailbox limit bumped up, I can't do my job with only 1 gig. I bet they'd love our company policy of "3 months of email retention". If it's important, you'd better save it off somewhere.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 03:40 |
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Ursine Asylum posted:I bet they'd love our company policy of "3 months of email retention". If it's important, you'd better save it off somewhere. Haha drat. The only other rules we have is that we disable archiving and psts through group policy.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 04:03 |
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Dr. Arbitrary posted:Maybe if your job involves sending and receiving a variety of large files it'd make sense because you could fill up over the weekend. Having worked on software that shipped on mobile devices, I (my group actually) was on many device-dev-specific mailing lists. Every day, I would get about 20mb worth of .xls files containing the full test reports about how device QA can verify that build 1234 is safe to flash. Suffice to say, even with auto archive and rules, having enough space in your mailbox can be critical.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 04:27 |
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Lum posted:Group chat is what I was using it for >.< Is there any reason you're not using multiple sign-in? I'm reasonably sure that's not browser dependent.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 04:50 |
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tomapot posted:From two pages back but chiming in to one-up you. Some departments in my company either have Radio Disney or sappy Disney tunes for the on-hold music. Nothing like "zippity-doo-dah" blasting through a conference call. I worked for an indian company about 10 years ago. Whenever anyone would call the Indian office, the hold music over there sounded like tinkerbell taking a poo poo, like really bad, old music box amplified and overmodulated like a psychotic ice cream van, and it was way off key to boot.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 05:24 |
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Ursine Asylum posted:I bet they'd love our company policy of "3 months of email retention". If it's important, you'd better save it off somewhere. We have this policy and I still have users who burn through their quota. For us it's mostly emailing large presentations back and forth and they just don't think about it. Usually I can teach them to manage their mailbox better and that's enough, but once in a while they really do get so much stuff that they need a bigger quota. Our quotas are smaller, though.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 07:28 |
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I never understood emailing big files. Just set up a FTP or http share or something. Or use mega if you can't get any help from IT.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 07:37 |
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SEKCobra posted:I never understood emailing big files. Just set up a FTP or http share or something. Or use mega if you can't get any help from IT. "But email is so simple and I understand it. Why do you want to make me learn something new? Do you just want to prevent me from doing my job? Can't you make it so my way works?"
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 07:44 |
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SEKCobra posted:I never understood emailing big files. Just set up a FTP or http share or something. Or use mega if you can't get any help from IT. Most (just about all) end users don't know what a file really is, let alone understand FTP well enough to use it.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 08:17 |
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Ursine Asylum posted:I bet they'd love our company policy of "3 months of email retention". If it's important, you'd better save it off somewhere. Maybe this would push our support team into properly making use of the KB instead of having a cache of saved email about random issues. Of course, it wouldn't.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 08:43 |
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Paladine_PSoT posted:Most (just about all) end users don't know what a file really is, let alone understand FTP well enough to use it. What is a file? A miserable pile of serialised structs!
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 08:49 |
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SEKCobra posted:I never understood emailing big files. Just set up a FTP or http share or something. Or use mega if you can't get any help from IT. We have a share which is totally public to anyone, so we say to people if you need to share something big leave it in there. The only stipulation is let the other person know because the share deletes all it's contents before the backup runs each night
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 09:02 |
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Email chat: ridiculously graphical corporate signatures repeated over and over in long chains.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 10:33 |
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angry armadillo posted:We have a share which is totally public to anyone, so we say to people if you need to share something big leave it in there.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 10:54 |
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PurpleButterfly posted:One Japanese-speaker probably transliterated "hook" into katakana as フック, and then a different one transliterated it back into English. "gently caress" is a generally-understood term in Japan - everyone over 18 (at least) knows what it means(and, as I think I've mentioned before, in my experience when Japanese developers get angry they tend to swear in English, which I find hilarious) - they were probably being all passive-agressive at you (This is extra-likely if you're in some sort of partnership which was set up with a non-Engineering part of the Japanese company, BUT communicate with the engineers) My real joy with our Japanese partners is that as of about a year ago they decided they only ever wanted to communicate with us in English (before that it was in Japanese) - and their English is terrible. They also seem to forget that all their emails are seen by (1) a native Japanese speaker (who, admittedly, studied IT in the UK, so their engineering Japanese is not great) and (2) A bilingual engineer who's spent more time as a developer for Japanese companies in Japan than most of their employees. Sometimes this means they include chunks of emails that they really really shouldn't. It's as if they've generalised "No foreigners speak Japanese" (which isn't true anyway) out to "No-one in Foreign countries speaks Japanese" (forgetting that there genuinely are some Japanese ex-pats out there)
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 11:12 |
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BurgerQuest posted:Email chat: ridiculously graphical corporate signatures repeated over and over in long chains. We have a supplier that uses a 700x400 image as a signature (because they think their loving business advert needs to be at the bottom of every email ). The supplier and our purchasing manager never trim down emails, and they're both top-posters, so it's perfectly normal to have multi-megabyte emails going back and forth that end like this: >>>>> *giant image* >>>>> >>>> *giant image* >>>> >>> *giant image* >>> >> *giant image* >> > *giant image* > *giant image* ... nested 50-60 levels deep.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 11:25 |
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I work for a small organisation, but does Google Apps regularly invoice people for $2 at a time? I don't understand what's going on there. Our account keeps getting suspended, and payments randomly don't go through for no apparent reason. I finally gave up and put a $100 credit on there after the (minimum increment) $20 apparently didn't work with the same god damned card.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 11:35 |
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stubblyhead posted:Is there any reason you're not using multiple sign-in? I'm reasonably sure that's not browser dependent. I don't want my accounts linked. Way back when, I got banned from Google Plus for refusing to give them my real name. This hosed up my phone which was prevented from logging in and syncing contacts and calendars. I ended creating a new account specifically for my phone and re-entering everything. It sucked. I now have two accounts, that one for the phone, which I also use for GTalk as I use that on the phone as well as the desktop, and another one which I use for uploading my mashups and recordings of my live DJ sets to Youtube. Since this activity basically involves uploading copyright music to Youtube that Google then identifies (usually gets between 2 and 8 songs out of a 2 hour set, then blocks my video in Germany) I figure that account is probably going to get banned eventually. I do not want to link it to my other account and gently caress up my phone again. Edit: vvvvv Oooh, that sounds perfect, thanks. Lum fucked around with this message at 15:29 on Sep 8, 2013 |
# ? Sep 8, 2013 13:06 |
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Lum posted:Group chat is what I was using it for >.< If you are using Firefox you could use the -no-remote switch to run another Firefox with a second profile and be logged into both accounts at once.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 14:59 |
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ookiimarukochan posted:"gently caress" is a generally-understood term in Japan - everyone over 18 (at least) knows what it means(and, as I think I've mentioned before, in my experience when Japanese developers get angry they tend to swear in English, which I find hilarious) - they were probably being all passive-agressive at you (This is extra-likely if you're in some sort of partnership which was set up with a non-Engineering part of the Japanese company, BUT communicate with the engineers) I think it was real. The guy was an employee of my company and it was used multiple times in a ticket to refer to switch hook flash. After we discovered it, which by the way shut down tier 3 support at a major vendor for an hour, as people just had to read it and show their friends, gently caress switch was changed to switch hook flash and there was an email thread added wherein a developer had to explain to the engineer why they changed it.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 16:35 |
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GreenNight posted:New user: I need my mailbox limit bumped up, I can't do my job with only 1 gig. Happens all the time but there isn't actually a hard limit anyway, people just get fed up of the warnings. But yeah we always get similar grumblings with the 20MB attachment limit "You can get a 2TB hard drive for £50, why are you being so awkward?" Sure, I'll install a lovely consumer grade hard drive for your mailbox then (hm.. this wouldn't be the worst of solutions. to shuffle fussy users onto bigger+cheaper storage)
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 18:33 |
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GargleBlaster posted:Happens all the time but there isn't actually a hard limit anyway, people just get fed up of the warnings. Yeah, we have warnings at 950 megs and all email stops at 1 gig. I have an automated powershell script that gives me a mailbox size list so I know who I need to hassle.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 18:39 |
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Encountered pc with no xcopy. Why? This just doesnt make sense...
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 20:22 |
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SEKCobra posted:Encountered pc with no xcopy. Why? This just doesnt make sense... "I deleted some files to tidy up and save space" The infamous line that eventually led to MS hiding protected OS files.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 21:15 |
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GargleBlaster posted:Happens all the time but there isn't actually a hard limit anyway, people just get fed up of the warnings. Exchange is pretty much at the point where you can do this now
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 21:44 |
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Paladine_PSoT posted:Most (just about all) end users don't know what a file really is, let alone understand FTP well enough to use it. A lot of our clients just use Dropbox to share everything. It's great because it's pretty much transparent to the end users, aside from the person in charge who tells us who gets what shares.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 21:45 |
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GargleBlaster posted:"You can get a 2TB hard drive for £50, why are you being so awkward?" Actually valid, though. New versions of Exchange don't chimp out with large databases, you can have multiple databases for archiving, we're also not in the days of SCSI drives in servers, cheap rear end SATA drives can be slotted in.. I know we stick to smaller sizes for the hell of it, to make them actually clear useless poo poo out, but we can technically accommodate retarded-size mailboxes online now at a very minimal cost (USER WAS PUT ON PROBATION FOR THIS POST)
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 22:01 |
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The problem is that we don't want people to use their mailboxes as file storage. No thanks.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 22:08 |
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GargleBlaster posted:Happens all the time but there isn't actually a hard limit anyway, people just get fed up of the warnings. "And you constantly complain that your laptop is slow. Magnify that by ${USERS} and you understand why we dont buy £50 disks for the exchange server." Not that they'd understand or process that information, but eventually it might sink through all that bone. If you hit a rock with a hammer hard enough, enough times, it WILL break.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 22:28 |
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GreenNight posted:The problem is that we don't want people to use their mailboxes as file storage. No thanks. I understand the actual management concerns, and I hate it when people constantly try to send enormous attachments to everyone, but the technical reasons are mostly gone, so instead of saying we can't do it when some doe eyed user says "2TB drives are dirt cheap" we should simply say "we don't want you to use it as a dumping ground. Cost has nothing to do with it."
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 22:33 |
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GreenNight posted:The problem is that we don't want people to use their mailboxes as file storage. No thanks. I agree - our construction company client is approaching 1.75 TB total DB size (spread across four DBs and this is for about 150-180 users), and we're going to have to up the individual mailbox quota beyond 32 GB soon. All because they just keep emailing giant PDFs back and forth, and while it's great that they're saving literally thousands of dollars a month on paper costs at jobsites, we have file shares and DFS set up precisely for this purpose, and they refuse to use them, or buy more storage for Exchange. It's going to be interesting when "just make it work without more storage" runs into "Exchange will not function if its DB drive fills up" (which has actually happened a few times already - the current Exchange LUN started at 1 TB). I'm now pushing for them to use shared mailboxes for this poo poo, so at the very least it's one mailbox that gets full of crap instead of an entire distro list's worth. (Though I understand Microsoft's reasoning about CPU power, I'm still not the biggest fan of them removing single-instance storage in Exchange 2010). But yeah, it's a management & policy problem - if they insist on using email as file storage, it's going to come back to bite them. And since they won't listen to us, we're just waiting for the trainwreck.
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# ? Sep 8, 2013 22:37 |
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Inspector_71 posted:A lot of our clients just use Dropbox to share everything. It's great because it's pretty much transparent to the end users, aside from the person in charge who tells us who gets what shares. You mean to say there are shops that don't immediately poo poo their pantaloons at the mere mention of "cloud"? The powers that be are terrified that Bishyaler fucked around with this message at 23:54 on Sep 8, 2013 |
# ? Sep 8, 2013 23:52 |
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We use corporate Syncplicity which is expensive as balls but at least we can manage it.
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# ? Sep 9, 2013 00:22 |
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HalloKitty posted:Actually valid, though. New versions of Exchange don't chimp out with large databases, you can have multiple databases for archiving, we're also not in the days of SCSI drives in servers, cheap rear end SATA drives can be slotted in.. We still are in those days. It's a small company with not a lot of money (because they piss too much of it away on marketing IMO, but that's their prerogative) However, we are finally upgrading from 2003 next week in fact, so then we can look at such things!
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# ? Sep 9, 2013 00:56 |
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nitrogen posted:"And you constantly complain that your laptop is slow. Magnify that by ${USERS} and you understand why we dont buy £50 disks for the exchange server." The hammer, the rock, or the user?
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# ? Sep 9, 2013 03:25 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 11:04 |
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Humbug Scoolbus posted:The hammer, the rock, or the user? Your will to live.
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# ? Sep 9, 2013 08:08 |