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Yesterday we ran out of space on a server. I comb through it and delete 16 GB of music and a few TV shows. Not pirated, just through iTunes. Why do people have iTunes? Well let me tell you a little story about local admin... I've applied for a new job. It's in the same local government so it's low pay but I get more control. As far as I know they have no ticket system. I've looked at Spiceworks and it seems pretty cool, is it cool?
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# ? Jun 26, 2014 23:21 |
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# ? Jun 8, 2024 09:36 |
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Yaos posted:Yesterday we ran out of space on a server. I comb through it and delete 16 GB of music and a few TV shows. Not pirated, just through iTunes. Why do people have iTunes? Well let me tell you a little story about local admin... Spiceworks is alright. It can be slow at times but they have made some improvements in that area recently.
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# ? Jun 26, 2014 23:40 |
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tehfeer posted:Spiceworks is alright. It can be slow at times but they have made some improvements in that area recently. I can say Spiceworks is a great free HelpDesk/inventory management tool. The community is great too for support for anything IT related. I actively post on there all the time and they've saved my rear end once or twice as well.
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# ? Jun 26, 2014 23:52 |
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tehfeer posted:It was a secure room however 3 users had access to it to store some of their sensitive documents. Before we went virtual they had many of their departmental servers in that room. They dealt with the day to day operation and management of those servers. What it comes down to is it was not just a random new employee who walked up and pulled the hard drives out. I'm kind of curious as to what happened to the employee? I would ask what kind of person wanders up to a piece of obviously high-tech, obviously important and obviously in-use, piece of equipment and pulls not one, but two parts of it out, just to see what happens. But we all know the answer to that and probably have seen it happen far too many times.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 08:35 |
A too-close-to-home BofH article came in... http://www.theregister.co.uk/2014/06/27/bofh_2014_episode_6/ quote:"So you're replicating the entire financials system for what, 7 YEARS? Or is it 10?"
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 13:51 |
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MJP posted:A too-close-to-home BofH article came in... Hurf Durf Power Pivot.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 14:22 |
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I opened this thread this morning specifically to post that BOFH piece. Regarding slow computers, there is absolutely no conversation with a user that is likely to give you a good idea of what the issue is. These are the same people who describe an inability to print as a crashed computer. You can ask them what, specifically, is happening slowly and you are still likely to come away with no useful information. Assuming you can get face time with them and the machine, I like to ask them to reproduce the issue in front of me. Often when they say "everything" is slow they really mean something like "Internet Explorer takes a long time to open" and I can disable their four worthless scamware toolbars and everything is copacetic again. I once had a user "reproduce" her "problem" and it turned out to be that Internet Explorer took something like 3/4 of a second to open. After this completely normal length of time the user said to me, "See? It's slow." Absolutely no problem to speak of. I think I disabled some minor piece of crap and it went down to 1/2 a second and the user was happy again. I think I could have changed nothing and the user would still have been satisfied that I "fixed" it.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 14:43 |
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Meanwhile, I've given quantifiable evidence to IT that for whatever reason file transfers to and from our analysis servers go about 1/10th the speed of transfers to any other server in the business and I just get blank stares. I can download games from Steam at home quicker than I can move FEA solutions across the network at work.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 15:33 |
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jammyozzy posted:Meanwhile, I've given quantifiable evidence to IT that for whatever reason file transfers to and from our analysis servers go about 1/10th the speed of transfers to any other server in the business and I just get blank stares. I can download games from Steam at home quicker than I can move FEA solutions across the network at work. Sounds like someone didn't pay their Comcast extortion fee for inter-node communication.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 15:46 |
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User had an issue with his laptop, and dropped it off. Thankfully he left his password on a sticky note, but every time I tried I couldn't get it to log in. The password contained i's, l's and 1's. They weren't the only characters, but of course they looked identical in his hand writing. I eventually had to track him down so he could log in, and asked him to verify the sticky note so I could log in again. Said it looked good, so I figured I was just being retarded. Had to bring it back again later when I still couldn't log in, watched him type the password in, and noticed it didn't match what he wrote. "That's just the way I write those letters."
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 16:23 |
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A few years ago my now MIL had an issue with her company IT. Her computer wouldn't boot, the helpdesk guy insisted he couldn't help her unless she could login to the domain. I've heard some other horror stories from my wife with her time at the company, she texted me this morning that there was a bug in her monitor, I responded with "what?" This arrived in response: http://imgur.com/v3sVrae Note the black mark near the bottom, that is a bug. I don't even want to know what sort of bullshit shes going to go through if it doesn't crawl out of there.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 16:41 |
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Godsped posted:She joked about doing that but instead she's going to sort through all of them. I'm pretty sure this thread was where I learned about a tool that will export emails from Outlook into .pst files by year. It might make her task easier if she uses that - sort thru 2014 emails, then 2013, etc.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 16:54 |
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tehfeer posted:It was a secure room however 3 users had access to it to store some of their sensitive documents. Before we went virtual they had many of their departmental servers in that room. They dealt with the day to day operation and management of those servers. What it comes down to is it was not just a random new employee who walked up and pulled the hard drives out. I'd fire the person on the spot. There's worse offenses, but it shows such a complete lack of understanding of technology or just common loving sense.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 17:03 |
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Godsped posted:She joked about doing that but instead she's going to sort through all of them. How the gently caress is this person even doing their job if they have that may unread e-mails? AlternateAccount posted:I'd fire the person on the spot. There's worse offenses, but it shows such a complete lack of understanding of technology or just common loving sense. I would say there aren't really much worse offenses than intentionally damaging hardware that could potentially lose business critical data and in fact did end up costing the company thousands of dollars of hardware plus the time it took to recover everything.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 17:09 |
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This person keeps their job and Dick Trauma is getting fired because a DirectTV receiver went down. There is no justice in this world.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 17:10 |
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Rawrbomb posted:I've heard some other horror stories from my wife with her time at the company, she texted me this morning that there was a bug in her monitor, I responded with "what?" I've had that happen, it's not extremely uncommon. The worst is when they die in a really obnoxious spot.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 17:18 |
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Wilford Cutlery posted:I'm pretty sure this thread was where I learned about a tool that will export emails from Outlook into .pst files by year. It might make her task easier if she uses that - sort thru 2014 emails, then 2013, etc. http://www.rethinkit.com/prodMailScavator.html I saved it knowing that one day it will save me some massive headaches.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 17:20 |
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Wilford Cutlery posted:I'm pretty sure this thread was where I learned about a tool that will export emails from Outlook into .pst files by year. It might make her task easier if she uses that - sort thru 2014 emails, then 2013, etc. That would be really nice; does anyone know what it is? E:fb Thanks!
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 17:22 |
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Inspector_666 posted:How the gently caress is this person even doing their job if they have that may unread e-mails? I'm not sure but she hired me for an independent event and paid the $200 bill I sent her so her system is working for me. What really gets me is that she's looking through all 34k unread emails because there might be something important she missed even if it was from 2004. I'm going to go up to her office in an hour to install mailscavator so that will make a nice difference.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 17:34 |
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Inspector_666 posted:How the gently caress is this person even doing their job if they have that may unread e-mails? I have a ton of "unread" emails in my inbox, but I have in fact read most of them. I have outlook set to mark messages as read after they've been open in the reading pane for 1 second, but "1 second" turns out to be more like 5-6 in my experience. I have a shitton of one liners that I can read faster than Outlook can mark them as read, and I just don't bother to mark them off later on. And don't get me started on the amount of rah-rah emails and other internal corporate bs that I just completely ignore.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 17:42 |
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CTRL A; Right Click; Mark as read. Having a huge number of unread would drive me nuts for some reason.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 18:02 |
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John Kruk posted:CTRL A; Right Click; Mark as read. Having a huge number of unread would drive me nuts for some reason. Or just right click on Inbox and Mark as read. I keep my inbox as clean as possible. Currently only 12 items in there. The rest are sorted into folders.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 18:05 |
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Lady calls in, states that she forgot her password. So mockingly I state that IT is going to start charging twenty five cents per password change or account lock, to be deducted from your paycheck. She states that's a pretty good idea. We laugh. Twenty minutes later I find out that she's the one in charge of the entire show/building/project.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 19:25 |
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m.hache posted:Or just right click on Inbox and Mark as read. Same here. It is my goal to have a completely empty inbox by COB Friday. I have no clue why people feel the need to store years worth of email in their inbox, it makes no sense to me. Just file that poo poo away in a folder if you want to save it.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 19:28 |
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m.hache posted:Or just right click on Inbox and Mark as read. I used to do that. I gave up on it a long time ago, and I'm happier for it.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 19:54 |
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fromoutofnowhere posted:Lady calls in, states that she forgot her password. So mockingly I state that IT is going to start charging twenty five cents per password change or account lock, to be deducted from your paycheck. She states that's a pretty good idea. We laugh. Twenty minutes later I find out that she's the one in charge of the entire show/building/project. Congratulations on your new revenue stream
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 19:58 |
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Phuzzy posted:Congratulations on your new revenue stream Coupled with increasingly longer and complex password requirements around Christmas time.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 20:09 |
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stubblyhead posted:I have a ton of "unread" emails in my inbox, but I have in fact read most of them. I have outlook set to mark messages as read after they've been open in the reading pane for 1 second, but "1 second" turns out to be more like 5-6 in my experience. I have a shitton of one liners that I can read faster than Outlook can mark them as read, and I just don't bother to mark them off later on. And don't get me started on the amount of rah-rah emails and other internal corporate bs that I just completely ignore.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 20:21 |
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Knormal posted:You can change that to 0 seconds and it'll mark them read instantly, at least in my experience. That's one of the few boxes that will accept a 0. More importantly, it's one of the few boxes that interprets a 0 as "do this immediately", instead of "infinite time later".
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 20:41 |
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JPrime posted:Coupled with increasingly longer and complex password requirements around Christmas time. Feel the power grow, become the BOFH you always wanted to be.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 20:54 |
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Knormal posted:You can change that to 0 seconds and it'll mark them read instantly, at least in my experience. That's one of the few boxes that will accept a 0. Interesting, I could have sworn I had tried that and found otherwise. There's also the option to mark as read when the selection changes, but that results in the top message in your inbox remaining marked as unread until you select something else.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 21:07 |
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So I'm looking to buy a replacement UTM device for a small business here (20-25 endpoints). Currently tossing around the WatchGuard, Meraki, Untangle and Sophos brands and I'm finding them to be all similar. Now obviously they can say almost anything on their website so I'd like some opinions from other techs if you have them. Thoughts or recommendations? Kinda leaning towards a Meraki right now.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 21:10 |
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On a roll today. Offsite user calls in, states that they want software installed and if I can do it soon. As in right now soon. I say no, since I don't know about full permissions on just up and installing software on systems but the other tech here does. Pass it off to them, they say ok, I'll get it done right now. They then get up and walk out to the bathroom without installing. So I'm kind of wondering if there's an issue between the two, or if the tech is just losing it.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 21:11 |
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fromoutofnowhere posted:Lady calls in, states that she forgot her password. So mockingly I state that IT is going to start charging twenty five cents per password change or account lock, to be deducted from your paycheck. She states that's a pretty good idea. We laugh. Twenty minutes later I find out that she's the one in charge of the entire show/building/project. I've had to run the fee up to $10 and use "bonehead" as the default password before. I collected that fee two or three times a month.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 21:12 |
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So we had a new guy start on Monday. Today he finished tearing apart an old imaging station that is becoming his desk. A few minutes ago the IT manager/sysadmin comes in and says, "Hey, did someone unplug a bunch of stuff back here?" "Yeah, why?" "Our domain controller went offline." Turns out it's a legacy DC in an old Dell tower case that we keep around in case there are users or data that haven't been migrated to the current system yet, which explains why it's stuffed behind a build station under a disused air conditioner.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 21:19 |
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Just had to force-power-off a server that was a) 91% through a RAID rebuild after replacing a dead drive and b) in the middle of shutting down because it was trying to install windows updates Reason? The server lives in a travel case, and was in heavy use until about 2 minutes before it had to be loaded onto a plane to Saskatchewan. I sure hope it comes up properly when it gets there, because they're not sending me along with it to set it up on site! Haha! Thankfully it's raid 6 and I've literally never encountered problems from interrupting windows updates on shutdown or I'd be a lot more worried than I am.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 22:01 |
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tehloki posted:I've literally never encountered problems from interrupting windows updates on shutdown or I'd be a lot more worried than I am. I have (at least, I assume that's what happened). I had a ticket last week where someone had complained that they were unable to log into their system. When I stopped by to look at it, the system was saying that the trust relationship between the system and the domain had broken. Looked at ADUC and the system was still listed and, to my knowledge, no one had joined a second computer with that same name to the domain. Even after removing and re-joining the domain didn't fix it. It wasn't until I had rolled it back to when it last installed updates (earlier that day, I think) that it would finally begin authenticating against the domain again. I'd never seen that happen before.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 22:21 |
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Gilok posted:Turns out it's a legacy DC in an old Dell tower case that we keep around in case there are users or data that haven't been migrated to the current system yet, which explains why it's stuffed behind a build station under a disused air conditioner with a note on it saying beware of the leopard. Fixed.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 22:25 |
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TWBalls posted:I have (at least, I assume that's what happened). I had a ticket last week where someone had complained that they were unable to log into their system. When I stopped by to look at it, the system was saying that the trust relationship between the system and the domain had broken. Looked at ADUC and the system was still listed and, to my knowledge, no one had joined a second computer with that same name to the domain. Even after removing and re-joining the domain didn't fix it. It wasn't until I had rolled it back to when it last installed updates (earlier that day, I think) that it would finally begin authenticating against the domain again. I'd never seen that happen before. code:
Mr. Clark2 fucked around with this message at 23:28 on Jun 27, 2014 |
# ? Jun 27, 2014 22:37 |
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# ? Jun 8, 2024 09:36 |
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Cool, thanks! I keep telling myself that I really need to learn Powershell, but I keep putting it off. I think since I'm not on call this weekend, I'll get started. I've got a couple of books and found a couple of Youtube channels that look pretty good.
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# ? Jun 27, 2014 23:44 |