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SamDabbers posted:Isn't there a Windows 10: No Bullshit edition? Does the Enterprise SKU get all that crap installed too, or is that only LTSB? yes but for a variety of reasons we can't get it right now. In 6 months to a year, sure, but unfortunately we need to do this now now now blah
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# ? Sep 26, 2017 22:37 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 01:31 |
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Yes, 10 Enterprise gets all that crap installed.
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# ? Sep 26, 2017 22:40 |
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KoRMaK posted:Bruh, notepad++ or sublime even if its nothing that needs compiled. Switch to twilight color scheme At my company you have to install software from an approved list. Notepad ++ is on there, but not sublime. I'm trying to get us all set up in Git, so Code seemed like the right direction to go.
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# ? Sep 26, 2017 22:41 |
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Thanks Ants posted:.OST files are a local mailbox cache, not relating to archiving. That I know. I guess another way to put it is, does msn.com email essentially use Exchange, and if so is online archiving also offered?
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# ? Sep 26, 2017 22:46 |
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Thanks Ants posted:I'm not ashamed to say that most of my job involves seeing problems and then figuring out what to type into Google to get onto the correct path to resolving it. The Iron Rose posted:Testing windows 10 for deployment in our enterprise environment, want to remove a bunch of the bloat that comes by default in Windows 10. Candy crush, minecraft, loving zune, et cetera. There are ProvisionedPackages which is poo poo like Skype Preview and Get Office - those live in the Windows image and removing those will prevent them from appearing for new accounts. There is also Start Menu Bloat - this is the really poo poo stuff like Minecraft and CandyCrush that installs on a per-user basis based on being pinned to the Start Menu. To prevent this stuff deploying for new accounts you have to alter the DefaultLayouts.xml in C:\Users\Default\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Windows\Shell. I'm still waiting for our designers to nail down what programs they want on there so in the meantime I just blank everything between the <StartLayoutCollection> tags - that forces it down to a default of just Edge, Setting and the Store.
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# ? Sep 26, 2017 22:47 |
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Wilford Cutlery posted:That I know. I guess another way to put it is, does msn.com email essentially use Exchange, and if so is online archiving also offered? As far as I know it isn't. All the MS documentation I can find for Outlook's option to keep a selected subset of mail cached says it applies to Exchange / Office 365 only.
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# ? Sep 26, 2017 22:55 |
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Update: not fired. Apparently I remind my manager of his son in law and he sees I have a lot of potential. If I haven't improved by next quarter I'm gone, but he'll be working with me on time management (my biggest problem area) on a weekly basis until then.
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# ? Sep 26, 2017 22:57 |
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22 Eargesplitten posted:Update: not fired. Apparently I remind my manager of his son in law and he sees I have a lot of potential. If I haven't improved by next quarter I'm gone, but he'll be working with me on time management (my biggest problem area) on a weekly basis until then. I see it as pretty positive that your manager isn't bullshitting you and avoiding confrontation
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# ? Sep 26, 2017 23:00 |
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My manager refuses to bullshit anybody as far as I can tell. It's refreshing.
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# ? Sep 26, 2017 23:04 |
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Ghostlight posted:I tell people that I wasn't hired because I know how to fix things - I was hired because I understand problems and how to find solutions. bless your heart, thank you.
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# ? Sep 26, 2017 23:04 |
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22 Eargesplitten posted:Update: not fired. Apparently I remind my manager of his son in law and he sees I have a lot of potential. If I haven't improved by next quarter I'm gone, but he'll be working with me on time management (my biggest problem area) on a weekly basis until then. Honestly that sounds like a decent meeting, nearly everyone needs to work on time management, and if he can actually help you, all the better.
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# ? Sep 26, 2017 23:06 |
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Ghostlight posted:I tell people that I wasn't hired because I know how to fix things - I was hired because I understand problems and how to find solutions. That's pretty awesome. Thanks. Unrelated: Sonic got breached. 5 million cards compromised.
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# ? Sep 26, 2017 23:09 |
Methylethylaldehyde posted:Please, tell us of your magical funtimes dealing with third party VSS providers, and the wonderful things they do juuuust differently enough to break poo poo. gently caress third-party VSS writers, and gently caress third-party VSS providers with an especially spiky pineapple. Every single one is bullshit. Assuming it doesn't just break native VSS stuff, it's inevitably going to fail in some oddball way.
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# ? Sep 26, 2017 23:24 |
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Thanks Ants posted:I was mildly encouraged when Microsoft went back from the ridiculous SKU count that was Vista, then I found out Windows 10 is going to have a Workstation edition and That's "Workstation" being used in the same sense that it used to be: a really powerful machine not in the same class as a desktop PC. This is Windows 10 for machines with a couple dozen cores and a terabyte of RAM. We do a lot of computational biology so these kinds of systems are surprisingly common on campus.
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# ? Sep 26, 2017 23:59 |
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anthonypants posted:What. I did that. Still no go, gives an error about the time not being synced to the DC. I boot back to the BIOS and the time is reset again.
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 00:16 |
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GreenNight posted:I did that. Still no go, gives an error about the time not being synced to the DC. I boot back to the BIOS and the time is reset again.
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 00:23 |
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anthonypants posted:Is it disconnected from the network? Nope. I get an IP address from DHCP from both ethernet and wifi. I can login to Windows but the error appears whenever you click on a mapped drive.
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 00:30 |
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GreenNight posted:Nope. I get an IP address from DHCP from both ethernet and wifi. I can login to Windows but the error appears whenever you click on a mapped drive.
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 00:36 |
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anthonypants posted:Disconnect it from the network, then try to log in with an account that's logged on to that laptop before, so it uses the cached credentials instead of trying to talk to a domain. Yes, we've been using an account with cached credentials. Hell I even removed it from the domain and readded it without issue.
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 01:05 |
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I have heard good things about VS Code and it does look pretty cool but it doesnt seem so great for PowerShell. Or rather, I haven't set it up right yet. I only occasionally write scripts and even when I do they aren't very long so maybe I'm not the target demo
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 01:28 |
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myron cope posted:I have heard good things about VS Code and it does look pretty cool but it doesnt seem so great for PowerShell. Or rather, I haven't set it up right yet. I only occasionally write scripts and even when I do they aren't very long so maybe I'm not the target demo https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ms-vscode.PowerShell quote:Features Edit: https://blogs.technet.microsoft.com/heyscriptingguy/2017/01/12/visual-studio-code-editing-features-for-powershell-development-part-2/ this link is better because it has cool gifs
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 01:32 |
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Dr. Arbitrary posted:Straw poll, only comment if the answer is Agree or Strongly Agree: Technically yes, but only if I had a couple bookshelves worth of reference books. My memory isn't so hot to begin with, and having the internet has basically atrophied it to the point of being symlinks to a synapse that says "yeah that's possible, I can't be assed to remember how though"
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 03:37 |
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ConfusedUs posted:I could, but only because I wrote a significant portion of the top results for problems that I encounter in my field. You can't google for VSS problems without running across my work. When I first read this post I thought you were referring to Visual Source Safe and I wanted to punch you through my phone. But then I remembered that that program died a horrible death in the mid 00's.
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 03:42 |
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MF_James posted:Honestly that sounds like a decent meeting, nearly everyone needs to work on time management, and if he can actually help you, all the better. Yeah, I was scared shitless for a week or so but at this point I feel like all I have to do is learn to manage my time and keep cool under pressure and the only real damage done will be to my year end bonus. Both my manager and the PM I work with are very paternal without being patronizing, if that makes sense. "Let me teach you what took me 30 years to learn on my own" type of thing. My manager told me he'll let me know if he gets the feeling I've stopped caring, so I feel safe that I'll get a warning if things start getting really bad.
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 03:54 |
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Agrikk posted:When I first read this post I thought you were referring to Visual Source Safe and I wanted to punch you through my phone. You'd think that. I know at least one company that was still using it as late as 2015.
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 04:08 |
Agrikk posted:When I first read this post I thought you were referring to Visual Source Safe and I wanted to punch you through my phone. I guess I should qualify my acronyms. VSS = Volume Snap Shot = the underlying tech that allows you to take backups of locked/in-use/open files in a Windows environment. It's been around since Server 2003 and actually worth a drat since Server 2008 and pretty loving solid in 2008R2 and up. Third party VSS stuff, though, can die in a fire. Ain't no one capable of doing that right. Not Symantec, not Oracle, not anyone. I launch a campaign of "no, gently caress that" every time our own internal group says "we should just make our own thing." Sure, there are a few limitations on what the built-in writers and providers can do. Especially on older versions of Windows. But given the choice between solid performance and maintaining our own extension of the service to chase some bleeding-edge feature set, I'm going to argue for solid performance every time.
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 04:31 |
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Not to be confused with SSV.
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 04:37 |
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ConfusedUs posted:I guess I should qualify my acronyms. Behold! Look upon my BackupExec 3, ye mighty and despair!
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 05:19 |
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Ursine Catastrophe posted:You'd think that. I know at least one company that was still using it as late as 2015. Microsoft ended support for it in 2005, but it certainly did not die. I worked for a company that used it for its software development (not a software business). One of the first things I did was propose to move to something relatively sane; the boss said VSS was perfectly adequate. After two incidents in the space of three months where it just lost 2 weeks' worth of code, he finally signed off on moving our code to TFS. This was in 2013. My favorite part, other than the aggressive instability, was its concept of branching. Make a new branch off of main, make edits to that branch, and VSS helpfully updated main for you! How loving CONVENIENT. Maybe that was a configuration option and some idiot had at some point set it up that way, but I can't for the life of me figure out what the point of that was.
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 05:54 |
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Git is insane but great. ever listen to a talk from torvald about it? It's alien tech lol
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 06:10 |
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KoRMaK posted:Git is insane but great. ever listen to a talk from torvald about it? It's alien tech lol I honestly believe that when we make first contact the aliens will be jaw-droppingly shocked at some of the algorithms we've come up with. And maybe a couple of proofs in mathematics.
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 07:15 |
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22 Eargesplitten posted:Yeah, I was scared shitless for a week or so but at this point I feel like all I have to do is learn to manage my time and keep cool under pressure and the only real damage done will be to my year end bonus. That's awesome, dude. My first and third supervisors in Geek Squad were like that, I would have followed them from store to store forever if I could have (and if it weren't retail). The first one helped me understand troubleshooting far beyond 'neighborhood kid that is good with computers', and the second taught me a good bit on the leadership/managerial side. If it weren't for them, I probably wouldn't have stayed in GS as long as I did, and I certainly wouldn't have been able to move up into real IT. Treasure bosses like that. I got lucky to have two so early on, they're loving rare.
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 09:46 |
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GreenNight posted:I couldn't do my job without all of you, confirmed. Same
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 13:37 |
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LethalGeek posted:Holy poo poo, for real? I did enough programing in college but was way more in a hardware course. I can do all the things they mention there still off the top of my head. Ok I'd have to think about it cause it's been years but I feel I can answer all that. Having been on the hiring end, poo poo is depressing. Che Delilas posted:Microsoft ended support for it in 2005, but it certainly did not die. I worked for a company that used it for its software development (not a software business). One of the first things I did was propose to move to something relatively sane; the boss said VSS was perfectly adequate. After two incidents in the space of three months where it just lost 2 weeks' worth of code, he finally signed off on moving our code to TFS. This was in 2013. My first job out of college used VSS. Because the very concept of source control wasn't raised in that school (AND STILL ISN'T BEING!!!) I didn't understand how fundamentally awful the concept of "mandatory atomic locking for files" was. At my next job, which used subversion, I asked how Armageddon doesn't happen if two people try to change the same thing since they can both work on the same file at once I wish I could go back in time and prevent VSS from ever being made.
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 15:05 |
Methylethylaldehyde posted:Behold! Look upon my BackupExec 3, ye mighty and despair! My favorite thing about BackupExec is that it sets Shadowstorage space to "unbounded". This means every time there's a new snapshot, it will use up to 100% of the drive's space for that snapshot. It also means that Windows won't automatically clean up old snapshots. It keeps all of them forever. Now, BE itself is supposed to clean up its own snapshots. But what happens if you switch from BE to another program? Why, shadowstorage is still Unbounded! So after running that new thing for a while, your drive is full, your backups may start to fail, and it's all that new program's fault, what a piece of poo poo, I'm going back to Backup Exec, why did I ever switch...
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 15:30 |
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Volmarias posted:At my next job, which used subversion, I asked how Armageddon doesn't happen if two people try to change the same thing since they can both work on the same file at once How does that work?
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 16:00 |
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I just spent the last two days reading through this between working tickets and dealing with lovely office politics and god drat does it make me appreciate everything I have. Schadenfreude is a great coping mechanism. On the upside, when you read this saga back to back instead of spaced out over the span of 4 years, it is a fantastic story. So many ups and downs. It would make a good book. Just needs a fantastic ending.
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 16:24 |
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Email came in, instructor was panicking because they sent emails from several different classrooms, and now that they're back in their office, the emails aren't in their sent folder in Outlook. Now, I know by default sent items aren't going to sync between computers, but is that a feature that can be enabled? I've told them to just look in OWA for the sent items as they'll be there.
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 18:11 |
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larchesdanrew posted:completely unfixable layer 8 issue.
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 18:17 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 01:31 |
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You fix a Layer 8 issue the same way you fix a printer; Put down a tarp, smash the head with a hammer, and bundle it all up for dumping in a landfill.
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# ? Sep 27, 2017 18:21 |