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The amazing part is that her department has extremely small turnover. I don't get it, I'd shoot myself if she was my boss. She does buy them a lot of pizza and treats, so she isn't completely evil.
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# ? Sep 12, 2013 20:39 |
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# ? Jun 8, 2024 09:33 |
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GreenNight posted:The amazing part is that her department has extremely small turnover. I don't get it, I'd shoot myself if she was my boss. She does buy them a lot of pizza and treats, so she isn't completely evil. I dunno. That sounds incredibly evil... Here, have this greasy pizza. All you can eat! Soda too! Load up! ~45 minutes later~ I gotta poop. Real bad. Mwahahahahahahaha
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# ? Sep 12, 2013 20:54 |
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I didn't mention the best part. Her husband is one of her employees. I always see the guy walking around chatting with people.
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# ? Sep 12, 2013 20:57 |
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Let's talk about cabling again. MOM WHAT'S A PATCH PANEL? 1. You can see one of our awesome Synology + drive dock backup systems 2. What? Store a bunch of PC's in the server room? Okay! 3. Why does HP use such a huge loving box to put a 19" monitor in? 3. I know we have a KVM but it's easier to just have a buncha keyboards on the desk. Really. 4. What, this pile of old PC's still running XP and even 2K? WE NEED EM
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# ? Sep 12, 2013 21:07 |
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Those are some big monitor boxes. I hope they are storing other stuff and not CRT's. Also those HP desktops on the floor can definitely run Win7 if you wished to upgrade...
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# ? Sep 12, 2013 21:08 |
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Bob Morales posted:Let's talk about cabling again. MOM WHAT'S A PATCH PANEL? You should really create a cluster with those spare computers...
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# ? Sep 12, 2013 21:11 |
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Bob Morales posted:What, this pile of old PC's still running XP and even 2K? WE NEED EM This is my favorite part about server rooms. No matter where you go there is always some lovely server somewhere running some ancient system that you can't shut down because it breaks ~something~. Who knows what that something might be? But you'd better not touch it. We had one of those a few years ago in a tiny server room that was supposed to be site-specific hardware only. Turned out we had production ETL data feeds running on an old rear end Rackable Systems server that nobody knew about. And it happened to die when I was working in that building on a Saturday. And before you ask, no I didn't break it. But since I was on site I got tasked with fixing it. The first thing I did when it came up was dump the disk to the NAS and then I spent a week trying to get the application running on a new VM running in one of our production data centers.
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# ? Sep 12, 2013 21:18 |
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I'm so glad I moved to operations and don't do office IT anymore. That photo is giving me so many flashbacks, from the awful cabling to the drive dock backup. I can't knock storing spare equipment in the server room, though; it's usually the only lockable location that only IT has access to. Unless the point is that they're ancient poo poo that should just go in the dumpster, in which case yeah that's flashback #3 for me.
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# ? Sep 12, 2013 21:26 |
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GreenNight posted:Those are some big monitor boxes. I hope they are storing other stuff and not CRT's. Also those HP desktops on the floor can definitely run Win7 if you wished to upgrade... They mostly run some lovely tarrif, tax, or rating software developed by Joe Bumfuck from 1996-2010. So they get RDP'd into once a month by someone. One is some box that runs WordPerfect 5.1 with some goofy database connector and then is plugged into some ancient fax box. There is a Sony tower from Best Buy in there as well. Our VMware cluster is running on hardware from 2006. 1TB SAN, yay. I need to take a picture of the upstairs where we have a loving museum of Pentium machines stored. Yellow Gateway boxes as far as the eye can see. Might need 'em one day! There are 4 fire safes on the ground. NONE OF THEM HAVE ANY TAPES OR DRIVES IN THEM There's a coat rack and a giant 1980's projector screen in the corner of the room. Good place to store it, by the cables that the whole company runs on!
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# ? Sep 12, 2013 21:27 |
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Docjowles posted:I can't knock storing spare equipment in the server room, though; it's usually the only lockable location that only IT has access to. Unless the point is that they're ancient poo poo that should just go in the dumpster, in which case yeah that's flashback #3 for me. We have two fairly large, lockable storerooms. One is full of stuff like old Xeon servers, P3 desktops, piles of broken laptops, rubbermaid bins of serial cables....
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# ? Sep 12, 2013 21:28 |
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Until about 2 years ago our Avaya CMS for a 800+ seat call center environment that did major revenue was running on a Sunblade 150 workstation. We finally upgraded to 16.x a while back.
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# ? Sep 12, 2013 21:34 |
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Bob Morales posted:We have two fairly large, lockable storerooms. One is full of stuff like old Xeon servers, P3 desktops, piles of broken laptops, rubbermaid bins of serial cables.... Yeah that sounds familiar. Last place I worked had tubs of poo poo dating back to the start of the company in the late 90's, complete with floppy disks, IDE cables, null modem cables, dead 73GB SCSI drives...
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# ? Sep 12, 2013 21:38 |
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It's been my personal mission around here to purge old poo poo whenever I get the chance. There was an entire bin full of 2ft RJ11 cables because for awhile in the 90s everything came with a RJ11 cable whether or not it actually had a telephone jack. Also, those cables are the most prodigious breeders known to man. Why do we need these? "Oh, they're great for patching in phone jacks in the back room." I look at the patch panel and note that every single jack has already been patched. Somehow I doubt we're adding 150 phones here very soon. Keep 5 and pitch the rest. The same went for a whole bin full of parallel cables. There's not one piece of equipment in the office that still uses a parallel connection, let's get rid of this poo poo.
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# ? Sep 12, 2013 21:45 |
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GreenNight posted:Yeah, I might have mentioned this before, but we have a manager here who makes their users schedule bathroom breaks. I wonder how until someone shits themselves. Oh, thanks for calling Bob! Sure let me go ahead reset your passwor -OHHHURRRShit PFFT!
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# ? Sep 12, 2013 21:49 |
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"I'd love to meet and discuss the new server but I've got a marathon poo poo session scheduled in for then. Maybe we could share a stall?"
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# ? Sep 12, 2013 22:54 |
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Bob Morales posted:3. Why does HP use such a huge loving box to put a 19" monitor in? It's not just monitors either. I just dropped off a 3.5" SAS drive at our local logistics center that comes in a box long enough to fit a full-size 104 key keyboard and tall/wide enough to pack optical drives in two across by three high. The box was pretty much filled with 90% foam and 10% drive.
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 00:54 |
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Better safe than sorry? Though I get all sorts of things shipped to me in an absurd manner. I ordered curtains and the box couldn't have been more than 6 x 4 inches, packed in a box with peanuts at least twice/three sizes as big. They won't break!
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 01:00 |
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Somehow apple manages to fill 90% of its packages without ill effects, so at this points it's pretty much complacency.
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 01:05 |
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Sepist posted:Small shops
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 01:57 |
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evil_bunnY posted:Somehow apple manages to fill 90% of its packages without ill effects, so at this points it's pretty much complacency. Yes, but Apple packaging is annoying to open en masse.
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 02:09 |
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psydude posted:Yes, but Apple packaging is annoying to open en masse. Really? What are you opening from Apple that is not 1.) as easy to open as anything else you'd typically receive 2.) with small outer boxes to get rid of and 3.) not well thought out from a design perspective (granted, I don't want to pay for that part - but really, it's nice stuff)?
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 02:26 |
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I'm still so unused to proper servers and proper support contracts that when I had to go replace a failed drive in a RAID on a Dell server, I was spellbound and ecstatic by the fact that Dell shipped it already in the caddy and I wouldn't have to deal with any screws. Also, scope of support is the best loving thing ever. Just, just the best.
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 02:40 |
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Yeah now all you have left to do is answer endless calls from Dell asking when you're sending the failed drive back, even though you've already done so.
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 04:58 |
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theperminator posted:Yeah now all you have left to do is answer endless calls from Dell asking when you're sending the failed drive back, even though you've already done so. Nope, that's on the account manager, not me.
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 05:02 |
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theperminator posted:Yeah now all you have left to do is answer endless calls from Dell asking when you're sending the failed drive back, even though you've already done so. I think you mean endless phone surveys asking you to rate the quality of service on your recent interaction with Dell's support team.
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 05:23 |
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Docjowles posted:I think you mean endless phone surveys asking you to rate the quality of service on your recent interaction with Dell's support team. One day, in 2025, I'll get an answer that will make me smile. Maybe.
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 05:35 |
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Docjowles posted:I think you mean endless phone surveys asking you to rate the quality of service on your recent interaction with Dell's support team. Then get billed for the drive.
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 05:46 |
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A while back I gave a rather scathing reply to one of the surveys I got after a closed ticket from another team (probably the team that takes care of all the Cerner poo poo). My boss called me in to his office and said that they complained that I gave them such a bad review. Is that not what it's for? They asked for my opinion, I gave it (Their service was poor, it's been declining for quite some time and it's pretty much what everyone here at this facility has come to expect, which is why they're always coming to us instead of going through the proper channels). If they don't want to hear how lovely they're performing, why are they asking me to rate their service and write a brief explanation?
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 05:55 |
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That stuff is almost always tied to bonuses, so you're probably on some hit list now FYI
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 06:50 |
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Tab8715 posted:On the same subject - what's the biggest raise or salary jump anyone has received? 20k in feb (told them I was job hunting), then job hop in june for another 25. Not a bad year.
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 07:35 |
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Geoj posted:It's not just monitors either. I just dropped off a 3.5" SAS drive at our local logistics center that comes in a box long enough to fit a full-size 104 key keyboard and tall/wide enough to pack optical drives in two across by three high. The box was pretty much filled with 90% foam and 10% drive. http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/11/21/more_hp_packaging/ Wasn't there some picture going around where HP shipped a guy like 50 screws, each individually wrapped and put in it's own 10" box?
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 13:01 |
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Walter_Sobchak posted:A challenger appears: Not to derail again, but it's even better now:
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 14:37 |
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I wish my server room was that big.
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 14:39 |
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Did those chairs get raged on or what, they are missing arms and poo poo.
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 15:40 |
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Got notified the other day that we'll be standing up some more VM's to replace our remotely managed physical legacy systems and adding another 10,000 users to our system (which is a small blip, honestly). The good news is that I'll be getting a crack at building these VM's from scratch, which means that I will finally be able to add VMware experience to my list of skills on my resume (I've been using it at home, but I like to have official confirmation if anyone ever calls for references). There's also talk at work about requiring everyone to have MCSA/MCSE as part of the new contract, and I am praying that it goes through - I would love to have a $15-20k raise. Other than that it's been pretty quiet at work, although that might change if we go to war against Syria.
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 15:41 |
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Walter_Sobchak posted:Not to derail again, but it's even better now: Two access points next to each other in the server room? What?
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 15:43 |
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Motronic posted:Really? What are you opening from Apple that is not 1.) as easy to open as anything else you'd typically receive 2.) with small outer boxes to get rid of and 3.) not well thought out from a design perspective (granted, I don't want to pay for that part - but really, it's nice stuff)? You're missing the point. When I'm unboxing 50 PowerBooks I don't care about cute compartmentalized boxes for peripherals. I want to yank it out of the box, throw the styrofoam packing off, and open it up. I haven't been a desktop guy for a while, but back when I was setting up entire labs of PowerMac G5s it was incredibly annoying to have to unbox the rest of the poo poo, when most HPs and Dells you just upend the box and dump out everything useful.
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 15:54 |
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psydude posted:You're missing the point. When I'm unboxing 50 PowerBooks I don't care about cute compartmentalized boxes for peripherals. I want to yank it out of the box, throw the styrofoam packing off, and open it up. If you are talking about PowerBooks and G5 packaging.....welp, I'm talking about things made in....let's say the last decade or so. You open the box, take off the top styrofoam and remove the machine. The peripherals are in another box across the foam, just like HP and Dell. The difference is that there are no twist ties holding cables together. They are all clear plastic sleeves with pull tabs on them that come right off. So.......if what you are complaining about it valid (I can't even remember what that packaging looked like) it's ancient history.
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 16:14 |
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Caged posted:Two access points next to each other in the server room? It's a new standard, 2x2^2 MIMO
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 16:27 |
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# ? Jun 8, 2024 09:33 |
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Bob Morales posted:Did those chairs get raged on or what, they are missing arms and poo poo. I have no idea how they got like that. Caged posted:Two access points next to each other in the server room? One is for our internal wifi, the other is for the "guest" wifi (WPA2, with a password that's EXTREMELY similar to the password for the internal wifi)
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# ? Sep 13, 2013 16:43 |