|
adorai posted:software defined networking still requires networking knowledge. This, just because you're "service chaining" a firewall infront of a server as a VM doesn't mean that you can forget everything you know about firewalls. It will be interesting seeing the "VMware guys" and the "Network guys" try to merge though, as most people I run into who are VMWare experts know very little about networking, but most Network engineers at least know how to build a VMWare server and create VM's. Anecdotal, of course. You just can't create a few VNICs and get the network guy to plug them into a switch in the future. A decent knowledge of MPLS, BGP, NAT, Filter based forwarding, etc. is going to be mandatory to get any SDN setup working. hanyolo fucked around with this message at 01:15 on Oct 7, 2014 |
# ? Oct 7, 2014 01:11 |
|
|
# ? May 16, 2024 18:15 |
|
I'd say the ability for a single employee to manage more systems means we'll have more systems, not fewer sysadmins, but that's just a random guess.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 01:12 |
|
Nope, jobs are finite and people can only know one thing, so you might as well just preemptively crawl into your software-defined coffin.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 01:16 |
|
hanyolo posted:You just can't create a few VNICs and get the network guy to plug them into a switch in the future. A decent knowledge of MPLS, BGP, NAT, Filter based forwarding, etc. is going to be mandatory to get any SDN setup working.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 01:31 |
|
adorai posted:It will be the opposite: the network guy will provision a port on the dvswitch and the VMware guy will connect it to his VM. Realistically, I would say the silos will continue breaking down and you'll end up with a WAN team and a datacenter team. The datacenter team will be a bunch of guys that specialized in all three disciplines important to virtualization: servers, switching, and storage.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 01:35 |
|
I need some advice and I'm not really sure where to turn. I've been in IT for about 10 years and I specialize in enterprise Backup/Recovery, particularly Commvault. I've always worked directly for companies as an employee and have never done contracting. I'm currently trying to figure out if I want to take a contract position I've been offered but it sounds fishy to me and I'm not sure if its just my inexperience in contract work talking or if its justified. Any input from people who know more about IT contracting, staffing, and corp-to-corp stuff than I do is extremely welcomed. Here's the situation: I've been offered a job by an Indian IT recruitment company (KRG Technolgies) to work for another Indian staffing company (HCL America) on a contract for their client, an energy company in New Orleans which they have a 5 year contract with. They want me to go to New Orleans for "around 2 months" (no specific end date) for training and then I can go back home and work remotely. For the first month or so I'd be an employee of KRG and then would be hired on full time by HCL and I'd be working with their client. All this stuff is completely foreign to me and I have no idea if it would be a good idea for me to take the position. The money is quite good and working remotely would be ideal for me, but I don't know if it will be worth all the possible BS that could come from dealing with this seemingly convoluted scenario where multiple staffing companies are in play. They want me to pick up and move to New Orleans on very short notice, by next Monday. I've never lived away from my home state so that makes me nervous, too. I haven't signed the offer letter yet and I'm kinda freaking out trying to figure out what I should do. There's nothing on the offer letter about any of the specifics of how long I'll be in New Orleans, when I'll be transferred to HCL, if my position and pay will stay the same after HCL hires me, or anything in writing about me working remotely from another state. Anyone who has experience doing contract work please help me out. Does this raise any red flags to you guys? Does this all seem pretty standard? Any advice on what I should expect working in the world of IT contacting vs. being an employee of a normal company? Any general advice? Is this even the right place to ask this?
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 01:40 |
|
Phil Tenderpuss posted:Anyone who has experience doing contract work please help me out. Does this raise any red flags to you guys? Does this all seem pretty standard? Any advice on what I should expect working in the world of IT contacting vs. being an employee of a normal company? Any general advice? Is this even the right place to ask this? I'm currently employed by a contracting company who is contracting me out to another company who have sent me as a representative of their company to a 3rd company (pretty much the same as you). All my timesheeting and pay is handled by the parent company though, so I don't need to create any invoices or anything which is good. It was a hassle to get all the access cards I needed and I provided my own laptop as the one they gave me was utter crap. Aside from that, I really haven't had any issues so far, they made me fill out OSHA forms/surveys for all the places I'm working to cover their asses but it's pretty much a normal job otherwise. vvvvv That does remind me, I took my contract purely to pad my resume and there is no travel involved. I was told that my contract would be 3 months, and then another 3 months at less days per week. 3 months the second company had some "budget" issues so I almost didn't get my extension, so be wary that your contract could abrubtly end at any time. I also don't get any sick/personal/annual leave. vvvvv hanyolo fucked around with this message at 02:06 on Oct 7, 2014 |
# ? Oct 7, 2014 01:50 |
|
Sounds shady and over complicated. I'd walk away. There's no promises on contracts, that 5 year contract could end tomorrow and you'd be SOL. I know guys who work full time for cisco that were suppose to be on site for "a few months" and they've been here for years now flying in every week.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 01:52 |
|
Didn't Cisco lose some enormous networking deal to Amazon because of SDN? And research showed the company would lose billions if they switch over to SDN?
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 02:00 |
|
Tab8715 posted:Didn't Cisco lose some enormous networking deal to Amazon because of SDN? And research showed the company would lose billions if they switch over to SDN? I thought it would be the opposite? AWS/Rackspace/Azure would certainly be cheaper for a small/medium sized business, but as you grow there would be a tipping point where it is way cheaper to rent/build your own datacenter(s), buy the hardware, hire the staff and do it yourself.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 02:20 |
|
Misogynist posted:Do you see virtualization-focused datacenter teams continuing to exist as SDN continues to break down many of the barriers between physical DCs and cloud networks on EC2, GCE, DigitalOcean, etc.? With each round of pricing cuts to the major providers, running your own virtual infrastructure for these little app servers seems more and more like a losing proposition. Lots of shops are using cloud for DR already, so we're already seeing virtualization infrastructures for DR sites being outsourced. edit: also, building a datacenter and bringing in fiber is expensive. Even with an in house team, a lot of times it will be cheaper to rent Rackspace until you are of a certain size.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 02:31 |
|
Here's the article I was looking for earlier... Cisco Lost A $1 Billion Deal With Amazon quote:The first was a deal with Amazon. Cisco thought it was going to sign $1 billion deal for network gear for Amazon, one of the largest network deals ever, the source said. That's certainly concerning although it could be just headlines but it's not like any organization is going to suddenly layoff half of it's network team and it's entire existing infrastructure.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 02:40 |
|
While SDN on commodity boxes certainly doesn't perform as well as close-to-the-metal networking gear with finely tuned ASICs, I also don't know anyone who's very concerned about datacenter latency and still buying Cisco gear either.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 02:51 |
|
Misogynist posted:While SDN on commodity boxes certainly doesn't perform as well as close-to-the-metal networking gear with finely tuned ASICs, I also don't know anyone who's very concerned about datacenter latency and still buying Cisco gear either.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 02:56 |
|
SDN will probably hybridized a lot of DC jobs, but a lot of network engineer jobs are in areas that probably won't be too affected by SDN: POP sites, NOCs, campus/corporate environments, wireless, and consulting.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 03:04 |
|
Phil Tenderpuss posted:I need some advice and I'm not really sure where to turn. I've been in IT for about 10 years and I specialize in enterprise Backup/Recovery, particularly Commvault. I've always worked directly for companies as an employee and have never done contracting. I'm currently trying to figure out if I want to take a contract position I've been offered but it sounds fishy to me and I'm not sure if its just my inexperience in contract work talking or if its justified. Any input from people who know more about IT contracting, staffing, and corp-to-corp stuff than I do is extremely welcomed. Run away
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 03:13 |
|
psydude posted:SDN will probably hybridized a lot of DC jobs, but a lot of network engineer jobs are in areas that probably won't be too affected by SDN: POP sites, NOCs, campus/corporate environments, wireless, and consulting. What do you mean by hybridization of DC jobs?
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 03:35 |
|
Disclaimer: I have no knowledge of these specific companies.Phil Tenderpuss posted:For the first month or so I'd be an employee of KRG and then would be hired on full time by HCL and I'd be working with their client. The bolded part might as well not even be there, that's how much you can count on it. quote:They want me to pick up and move to New Orleans on very short notice, by next Monday. gently caress that right in the ear. I would never take something that uncertain on that short a notice, not without a huge incentive. Maybe like, two years' worth of signing bonus up front, so if they decided to jerk me around it would hurt them, not me. Moving sucks poo poo under the best of circumstances, and on that short a notice you'll probably be living out of a hotel while you look for a place, which you will have lots of fun doing while being trained during business hours.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 03:37 |
|
Tab8715 posted:What do you mean by hybridization of DC jobs? As mentioned previously, network engineers doing a lot more virtualization.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 03:43 |
|
SDN will hurt Cisco, but unless you work for Cisco that shouldn't necessarily concern you. Server virtualization didn't kill off the sysadmin.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 04:49 |
|
From everything I've read and know about SDN it's really just a way to get around the traditional limitations of networking when building big public clouds. I have no idea what purpose SDN could serve in a one-customer data center. True SDN, that is, the decoupling of the control plane from the phsyical hardware, is something that is applicable everywhere, but for whatever reason no one has really pursued it at this stage.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 05:02 |
|
Thanks for your guys' thoughts on my predicament. They mostly echo a lot of what I've been thinking, too: that there's just too many opportunities to get screwed over and not enough guarantees that I won't be. There's just a lot of red flags including a fact that I forgot to mention: my "interviews" (one phone one skype) both lasted like 4 minutes. But there's still this part of my brain that thinks it might all be worth it if I could work from home and make the kind of money they're offering. I have dreams of having work up on one monitor while playing video games on the other, taking long lunches with friends, not having people breathing down my neck all the time or having to deal with office drama. These are alluring dreams, friends.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 05:34 |
|
psydude posted:SDN will probably hybridized a lot of DC jobs, but a lot of network engineer jobs are in areas that probably won't be too affected by SDN: POP sites, NOCs, campus/corporate environments, wireless, and consulting. This is where I am now. We have two very small "datacenters" with vmware networking, but for the most part its routing and switching spread across a large WAN with many branches. I don't see SDN impacting disjointed geographic networking nearly as much as dense datacenters where they are already using network automation and provisioning ports on a daily basis. The issue though is even if you own job is safe, if layoffs in the big datacenters saturate the market with qualified engineers looking for work, its no good for anyone.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 12:54 |
|
As someone who has been looking for a new job, I'm not too excited about HP dumping 55k more people into the market
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 15:07 |
|
whaam posted:This is where I am now. We have two very small "datacenters" with vmware networking, but for the most part its routing and switching spread across a large WAN with many branches. I don't see SDN impacting disjointed geographic networking nearly as much as dense datacenters where they are already using network automation and provisioning ports on a daily basis. The issue though is even if you own job is safe, if layoffs in the big datacenters saturate the market with qualified engineers looking for work, its no good for anyone. I doubt we'll see layoffs in data centers any time soon. This technology is becoming commonplace because data centers are expanding faster than their support staff can efficiently manage, so this is a way of reducing the time and complexity of the DC network. There's new data centers springing up everywhere, and as more and more of the world becomes connected it will only increase the demand for infrastructure jobs. The difference will be the skillsets those jobs require.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 15:27 |
|
Every new technology puts a panic into some folks. Virtualization didn't kill the sysadmin, SDN won't kill the network admin. It's simple, keep your skill set up to date and you'll never have a problem finding work.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 16:07 |
|
ZetsurinPower posted:As someone who has been looking for a new job, I'm not too excited about HP dumping 55k more people into the market When Cisco laid off a bunch of people a few years back, I mentioned that that was rather unfortunate but I was told it wasn't that bad. One of the owners at a partner told me how the work just can't go away, some people will have more to do but a lot of it will be outsourced. Working for a partner may not have the same salary or all the perks as does working directly for Cisco. This is also assuming the jobs are outsourced with-in the United States
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 16:55 |
|
Tab8715 posted:When Cisco laid off a bunch of people a few years back, I mentioned that that was rather unfortunate but I was told it wasn't that bad. One of the owners at a partner told me how the work just can't go away, some people will have more to do but a lot of it will be outsourced. IT Infrastructure work isn't really outsourceable to India. Most of the things that can be outsourced, like development and help desk have already been moved by any companies that care to do that. The jobs that are still here are going to remain here because they need people who are reasonably local to do them. You can't fly your sales people or your SEs or your Professional Services all across the ocean every time there's work that needs to be done in the states. Partners make money and build relationships by spending time with customers, face to face, and that requires a certain proximity. And any company that still thinks internal IT is important isn't going to hire a bunch of guys 12 time zones over to watch big brother and remote in, or whatever. Keep in mind that we just finished having a 3 page derail about the benefits of a guy getting up and walking over to a user to explain that their issue was being worked on. That stuff still matters and always will, and you can't do that with remote IT. Skype isn't a substitute. Also, my experience working directly with Cisco folks and then with partners like WWT is that the partners were generally getting paid better than the Cisco employees. People jump back and forth between vendors and VARs constantly for better pay, better jobs, etc.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 19:13 |
|
What do you mean by IT Infrastructure, SE's (Support Engineers) and Professional Services? Yes, sales isn't something that'll be outsourced to India. Not trying open up multiple conversations but I thought the bit about face-to-face communication was great discussion.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 20:35 |
|
Physical installation of equipment and initial configuration. That'll go to partners/manufacturers and occasionally be done in-house but it's rarely off shored just because you typically need to at least be present for initialization. Some companies try to outsource anything and everything but ultimately end up bringing large portions of it back in.
|
# ? Oct 7, 2014 22:12 |
|
not sure if this is the right thread, but what routers do you guys recommend for small busineses that need remote worker VPN ? We currently sell on Draytek Vigors - 29xx or 28xx depending on whats on offer at our supplier, but although these appear to be good quality, they are still pricey. We set them up so that I can VPN to their network from any PC and thus get to the UI of their phone system / call logger / server etc. without having to do complex port forwards / redirects. do TP-Link etc do routers that support PPTP VPN ?
|
# ? Oct 8, 2014 16:28 |
|
I couldn't recommend using TP-Link for anything important to be honest. Linksys used to make a decent small business VPN router, the RV something something, but it's been a while, and I'm not sure whats up with Linksys these days after Cisco sold them.
|
# ? Oct 8, 2014 17:02 |
|
spiny posted:not sure if this is the right thread, but what routers do you guys recommend for small busineses that need remote worker VPN ? Ubiquiti Edgerouter Lite.
|
# ? Oct 8, 2014 17:10 |
|
psydude posted:Ubiquiti Edgerouter Lite. they look interesting, cheers
|
# ? Oct 8, 2014 17:16 |
|
My department name was apparently changed from <place> Technology Services to <place> Technology and Facilities Services. Department head just sent an email asking that our signatures be changed accordingly. Pretty sure I'm just dropping the department out of my signature entirely instead and just leaving my job title which should be fine with everyone. I'm definitely not expected to do any facilities work, so I'm not worried about that, but I can just see the Re:'s - "Hey, since you're in facilities..." coming in on a regular basis if I leave that in there...
|
# ? Oct 8, 2014 19:02 |
|
If the DrayTek's are working for you but some of your customers find the price hard to handle then I can't see how that customer is worth having around to be honest. DrayTek routers aren't expensive by any stretch.Japanese Dating Sim posted:My department name was apparently changed from <place> Technology Services to <place> Technology and Facilities Services. Proof that the Computer Janitor is a lot closer to reality than people think.
|
# ? Oct 8, 2014 19:04 |
|
Thanks Ants posted:If the DrayTek's are working for you but some of your customers find the price hard to handle then I can't see how that customer is worth having around to be honest. DrayTek routers aren't expensive by any stretch. Eh, I wouldn't view this as an omen. I'm at a university on a particular school's IT team, and we just have a guy here who handles the little one-off office moves and smaller projects like that. They had to put him in some department, I guess, but there's really no cross-over work.
|
# ? Oct 8, 2014 19:09 |
|
I've had an unusually bad day, even for this place, and the icing on the poo poo cake was just dropped on me. We have a check business and we want a mobile app that customers can design their own checks, and then take a picture of a current one, and upload it to our systems to import the data. And there was just a meeting where the web team argued that we don't need to encrypt the data coming in from the customer 'because it's just a picture'.
|
# ? Oct 8, 2014 19:12 |
|
High-Water Marx fucked around with this message at 21:40 on Jan 24, 2024 |
# ? Oct 8, 2014 19:42 |
|
|
# ? May 16, 2024 18:15 |
|
Get whatever knowledge you can get and get the hell out of web hosting would be my advice. It's a stepping stone, not a career.
|
# ? Oct 8, 2014 20:01 |