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Sickening posted:Anything that doesn't equal short term profits is hard to sell. I am stuck between thinking that this is just where business shifted to over the years or if its always been this way and I was just naive. Yeah I dunno. But I got a job offer from a large corporation yesterday, so gently caress em.
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# ? Sep 18, 2014 17:27 |
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# ? May 21, 2024 18:00 |
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Vicas posted:To be honest it's not really worth your time or the company's time to pursue the people who break their iPhones "accidentally" in completely transparent ways
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# ? Sep 18, 2014 20:33 |
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Mustache Ride posted:That was our quandary too. We're a small 30 person eDiscovery/Forensics firm and we're trying to branch off into offering our services to larger corporations that require a SOC2 in order to host their data on our systems. Even though the cost is more than the potential business we have now, I keep trying to tell them that little icon on our website will bring so much business our way. They loving love spreadsheets. Do a 1, 3 and 5 year ROI analysis using best/average/meh/terrible outlooks on potential engagements. Then add that in addition to the ~10-15% ROI, they're able to solicit business from, and build relationships with large governmental contracting agencies. "We can invest in this now, and be able to say yes to the most demanding federal client, or we can invest in this later, after passing up a few of them first".
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# ? Sep 18, 2014 20:52 |
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Knormal posted:It's looking like the way we're planning to start the transition from Blackberry to iPhone is to replace the old Blackberries "as needed" from a smallish initial order. I don't deal with the phone side of things, but I'm looking forward to seeing what kind of creative things our users will come up with to deomonstrate their need.
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# ? Sep 18, 2014 20:56 |
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Panthrax posted:Re: iPhones and iPads. Oh Jesus, all I can think of is lead dust flying around.
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# ? Sep 18, 2014 21:21 |
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Gerdalti posted:I think this is just a case of "too big for our britches". No one wanted to involve me in any of the actual discussions, and then went "Oh, I'm sure IT can get that done pretty quickly". This is not our typical client, and considering the cost of the SOC 2 Type 2 audit would far exceed (even at the low end) the money the client would pay us over a year, it seems like it's probably not the right choice business wise. All other companies involved how now stated that the requirements are too much and would be unprofitable to implement, which is exactly what I said. I work for an e-commerce company. I only know about our it department but that project alone was about 800 developer hours (including dbas and admins).
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# ? Sep 18, 2014 21:35 |
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Che Delilas posted:Oh Jesus, all I can think of is lead dust flying around.
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# ? Sep 18, 2014 21:57 |
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Collateral Damage posted:Don't breathe this! IPad chem trails.
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# ? Sep 18, 2014 21:59 |
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Che Delilas posted:Oh Jesus, all I can think of is lead dust flying around. None, thanks to RoHS, but plenty of other poo poo that has no business being in your lungs
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# ? Sep 18, 2014 22:17 |
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Che Delilas posted:Oh Jesus, all I can think of is lead dust flying around. I'd be more worried about breathing glass.
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# ? Sep 18, 2014 22:32 |
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demonicon posted:I work for an e-commerce company. I only know about our it department but that project alone was about 800 developer hours (including dbas and admins). Yeah, we're just a fundraising company that works with non profits, this client just has some federal funding, so apparently this is a requirement. It's the first potential client in 30 years that has had federal funding, can't see it coming up much in the future either.
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# ? Sep 18, 2014 22:38 |
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A call came in... Small medical client of the MSP I work for, and the lady is someone I've worked with before who's honestly a real sweetheart and probably one of the more patient people there. Anyhow, she says she's been getting notices from Word/Excel about not enough disk space or resources, and script errors in IE when using their medical app. I check out the laptop, and find the hard drive is partitioned...oddly. A Fujitsu model that's supposed to have come with a 160GB drive, but the C and D partitions only add up to 50GB. Did some routine cleanup, C drive had like 20MB free and I got it up to 5GB total but couldn't free anything else. D drive shows 4GB used and 16GB free, and I'm hoping the client didn't get hosed and sold a smaller drive than what they were quoted. Go into disk management, and I'm dumbfounded - the drive is partitioned out into 5 parts, the 2 above that can be "seen", a 200MB system partition, and 2 other partitions that are marked "unallocated" at 16GB and 85GB, respectively. So when added up, it all comes closer to the full drive capacity it should be, and I find that the D drive is literally only being used for the page file for the system. This isn't the first time I've run into this and it ONLY happens with Fujitsu laptops...why in the hell would someone do that? Got it all figured out, disabled the page file, was able to clean up the extra space, get rid of the D partition and extend the C drive out. Finally has over 100GB free space, upgraded Java and IE, no more script errors coming up. I'm just dumbfounded at how or why the hard drive would be set up that way to literally only give access to less than 1/3 of the space. I want whatever Fujitsu employees are using, that poo poo must be phenomenal.
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# ? Sep 19, 2014 01:34 |
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Look, PAL, you don't want your page file corrupting your main partition and I can't be bothered to fix my imaging setup to not make insane partition sizes so deal w/it.
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# ? Sep 19, 2014 01:58 |
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You shouldn't disable the page file outright imo.
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# ? Sep 19, 2014 02:01 |
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One client I visited asked me to assess their current desktop PCs and recommend upgrades/replacements. For some reason a lot of them had the page file set to exactly 18000 MB.
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# ? Sep 19, 2014 02:51 |
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Ozz81 posted:A call came in... That's worse than the one I've had to deal with. A client bought some whitebox "Systemax" PCs before I was consulting for their IT. About 5 of these units from 2009 have a 40gb C: partition which is called IMAGE RECOVERY and has the image of the win7 dvd on it. The D: partition is where windows installed. Of course every application installs itself on C:\ so that 40gb partition slowly fills up. The best solution is to reinstall the machines with proper partitions (one big partition, gently caress system recovery when you have a windows 7 disc handy) but it saves them money to wait until the OS starts freaking out about no space being left and them not being able to open attachments, etc. At least it's not a Fujitsu, I guess!
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# ? Sep 19, 2014 02:51 |
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spankmeister posted:You shouldn't disable the page file outright imo. I am guessing he disabled it to get rid of it so he could blow away the D: partition and expand C: before re-enabling it. Also the other empty partitions may have been ext4 and held her special linux distro she used outside of work.
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# ? Sep 19, 2014 02:55 |
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^ Yeah, forgot to clarify - I couldn't format the D partition down until I disabled the page file first, then rebooted. I re-enabled it again after I got everything sorted, so it's all good
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# ? Sep 19, 2014 05:02 |
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An incoming ticket posted:Since arriving at $Company name just about 1 month ago, I have recieved over 500 emails from this team that I don't believe that I need to be getting. Am I missing something [...] please go into whatever systems is generating the emails and remove me from the list. Not sure if my peers are getting the same volume of emails or not... Me: Hey boss, we have a VP asking to be removed from lists that he is supposed to be on by policy. Boss: Then ask his boss. Me: *Fires off an email to the CRO* This is going to be fun...
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# ? Sep 19, 2014 20:04 |
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OWLS! posted:Me: Hey boss, we have a VP asking to be removed from lists that he is supposed to be on by policy. You sent your email to the what?
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# ? Sep 19, 2014 20:36 |
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Chief Rectal Officer.
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# ? Sep 19, 2014 20:37 |
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OWLS! posted:Me: Hey boss, we have a VP asking to be removed from lists that he is supposed to be on by policy.
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# ? Sep 19, 2014 21:05 |
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OWLS! posted:Me: Hey boss, we have a VP asking to be removed from lists that he is supposed to be on by policy.
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# ? Sep 19, 2014 21:09 |
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Related to dumb emails, yesterday I received a genuine, actual email chain where someone accidentally added a distro to an email. Cue a bunch of dumb shits replying with "remove me from this distro please" I got about 30 emails within a few minutes of morons replying all asking to be removed from some random distro I've never heard of.
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# ? Sep 19, 2014 21:41 |
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Cojawfee posted:Related to dumb emails, yesterday I received a genuine, actual email chain where someone accidentally added a distro to an email. Cue a bunch of dumb shits replying with "remove me from this distro please" I got about 30 emails within a few minutes of morons replying all asking to be removed from some random distro I've never heard of. How is this possible? How do people reply-all every single time? It baffles me.
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# ? Sep 19, 2014 21:46 |
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Beamed posted:How is this possible? How do people reply-all every single time? It baffles me. I work in government now and my first week I got blasted for emailing only the person that I needed to organize something with instead of all ~ 50 people that are working on a project. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
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# ? Sep 19, 2014 22:00 |
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I have the opposite problem with my coworker, if an email is sent to our entire IT distro list, he will never reply-all. So I'm constantly having to ask him "did you respond back to so-and-so?" "Oh yeah I did"
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# ? Sep 19, 2014 22:09 |
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nexxai posted:This is the gooniest poo poo I've read on here in a while. Why didn't you just tell him that he's supposed to be on it by policy and leave it at that? Instead you're involving buddy's boss and making a non-issue an issue. Oh we did. The response was "Change the policy". Joke's on him, his boss (yes, the Chief R(ectal)(enal)(ice)(I have no clue) Officer) is on the same lists and doesn't complain. I guess I missed the funny bit when writing up that post.
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# ? Sep 19, 2014 22:19 |
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Beamed posted:How is this possible? How do people reply-all every single time? It baffles me. I honestly don't know. I've seen them around the internet and think "wow, no one is that dumb." Then it just happened out of the blue.
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# ? Sep 19, 2014 23:36 |
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Rolled out a new ftp server today. Our old one just had a single login, had 36000 directories and almost 7 million files dating back as far as 2001. I announced the new one last month, with weekly updates and request for clients/vendors that would need logins. 180 logins created, tons of emails saying to get everyone their new login info and notify of the blackout period. New server comes up, I send the final email, complete with brain dead instructions. 10 minutes later I get asked a dumb question by one of my artists "when are you starting the new server?". Am hour later, the same artist has sent old information to a vendor, and is blaming IT because "the ftp server must be down". How the hell do you get people to read emails? I've been doing this 14 years and haven't found the secret.
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# ? Sep 19, 2014 23:51 |
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Gerdalti posted:How the hell do you get people to read emails? I've been doing this 14 years and haven't found the secret. People who don't read emails are also people with no concept of irony, no sense of shame, and an inability to learn that makes Pavlov sad. All you can do is resend the same email, bold the part they need to read in size 20 red font, and hope it works.
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# ? Sep 19, 2014 23:58 |
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Beamed posted:How is this possible? How do people reply-all every single time? It baffles me. With only a few exceptions, not hitting reply to all in my org will get you in trouble. I got chewed out once for removing redundant people from a chain(they were either included in lists, or not relevant to the issue). Some people are just conditioned to doing it that way.
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# ? Sep 20, 2014 00:50 |
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Cojawfee posted:Related to dumb emails, yesterday I received a genuine, actual email chain where someone accidentally added a distro to an email. Cue a bunch of dumb shits replying with "remove me from this distro please" I got about 30 emails within a few minutes of morons replying all asking to be removed from some random distro I've never heard of. Please remove me from this mailing list. Thanks.
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# ? Sep 20, 2014 00:52 |
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Gerdalti posted:How the hell do you get people to read emails? I've been doing this 14 years and haven't found the secret. At my old job where I had an expense card, I would buy $5 Starbucks gift cards and give them out with a line in the email saying "the first person to reply to me with the word banana (or something) wins!" It actually sort of worked.
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# ? Sep 20, 2014 00:55 |
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Sonic Dude posted:At my old job where I had an expense card, I would buy $5 Starbucks gift cards and give them out with a line in the email saying "the first person to reply to me with the word banana (or something) wins!" I remember one of my teachers at my middle school did something like this on a test. You read the instructions, it told you to raise your right hand to get extra credit. She did this twice in the same year. Both time, I was the only one.
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# ? Sep 20, 2014 00:59 |
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Methylethylaldehyde posted:People who don't read emails are also people with no concept of irony, no sense of shame, and an inability to learn that makes Pavlov sad. All you can do is resend the same email, bold the part they need to read in size 20 red font, and hope it works. Filtered as spam due to color and text size.
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# ? Sep 20, 2014 01:01 |
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RadicalR posted:I remember one of my teachers at my middle school did something like this on a test. You read the instructions, it told you to raise your right hand to get extra credit. My sixth grade teacher gave out a "read all of the instructions before you start" quiz, which was both sides of the paper, and slowly got stranger and stranger until the very end, which was "disregard all of the previous questions, sign your name, and sit quietly until your paper is collected." You could tell who ignored his explicit "read the whole thing!" instructions when they started standing up to try to lick their elbow.
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# ? Sep 20, 2014 01:05 |
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DrAlexanderTobacco posted:Please remove me from this mailing list. Thanks. I did this once. The judo club at my college kept e-mailing me a year after I graduated and moved back home, and my e-mails directly to the head of it didn't stop them. I felt dirty.
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# ? Sep 20, 2014 01:18 |
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Inspector_666 posted:I did this once. The judo club at my college kept e-mailing me a year after I graduated and moved back home, and my e-mails directly to the head of it didn't stop them. There are some sites that do that thing where they have 40 different checkboxes in at least two separate areas for you to uncheck if you want them to stop flooding your inbox. poo poo infuriates me. I've taken to just using gmail's "report spam" button for that, and the last time I did it, google asked me if I wanted them to try and unsubscribe for me! The thought of the loving Google Secret Service sending a Cease and Desist on my behalf is somehow so appealing to me.
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# ? Sep 20, 2014 01:27 |
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# ? May 21, 2024 18:00 |
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Sonic Dude posted:At my old job where I had an expense card, I would buy $5 Starbucks gift cards and give them out with a line in the email saying "the first person to reply to me with the word banana (or something) wins!" I've considered this, something in the middle like "also, there are donuts in IT".
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# ? Sep 20, 2014 01:44 |