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gently caress printers
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# ? Feb 7, 2018 13:29 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 03:25 |
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sneakyfrog posted:gently caress printers Get a printer contract. I cannot praise ComDoc service enough. Sales, you usually have to negotiate the price down. But their service is amazing.
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# ? Feb 7, 2018 15:00 |
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Beefstorm posted:Get a printer contract. I cannot praise ComDoc service enough. yup this is my answer to ANYTHING having to do with goddamn printers.
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# ? Feb 7, 2018 15:34 |
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Related article that I haven’t read yet: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/02/12/why-paper-jams-persist
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# ? Feb 7, 2018 22:39 |
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Get a printer contract but don’t get a Xerox printer contract because you still end up supporting it yourself anyway.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 09:17 |
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Rick posted:Get a printer contract but don’t get a Xerox printer contract because you still end up supporting it yourself anyway. God, I thought this was just a local thing (we have two main printer companies here, one is Xerox and hot loving garbage).
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 09:44 |
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I led a couple training classes for Xerox service reps. They were good and nice, but then they decided dealership networks should do all the sales and service. So unless you're on a government contract, or some other $Bigmoney customer, you don't have real Xerox service and it probably shows.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 15:15 |
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That's a relatively new thing for Xerox (5 years or so?) and they sucked before then too. Since we're in the small shop thread, as a general rule of thumb I try to avoid the monoliths in whatever space I'm dealing with. I'm not saying you gotta go mom and pop, but there's no reason to do business with the Xerox, AT&T, Ciscos of the world if you can avoid it. Obviously you sometimes don't have a choice.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 15:40 |
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Rick posted:Get a printer contract but don’t get a Xerox printer contract because you still end up supporting it yourself anyway. I have no experience with Xerox direct. But ComDoc, also owned by Xerox, has done an excellent job of keeping us happy. Service requests are usually handled same day or next day, assuming they don't need to order a part.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 17:14 |
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I can believe it, the tech isn't necessarily bad and I could see it being supported well under different management. For me it was more like same week or next week and if it needed a part, who knows. And "well I guess it's just not going to work" instead of helping to work through complications during a non-traditional but necessary deployment.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 17:51 |
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Methanar posted:The economics of Just Use Office 365 / Google apps help me with this one pls
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# ? Feb 9, 2018 00:02 |
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Thanks Ants posted:IMO the requirement of reliability means you need to be able to see what's going on, unmanaged switches are a black box so you're going to be constantly second-guessing what the causes of any issues are as you have no way to see port statistics, STP topology changes etc. code:
e: did my math wrong. It's only 3.1 pb. Still a lot tho. e; I did my math wrong again. I was right with the original 55pb NevergirlsOFFICIAL posted:help me with this one pls I don't remember any of the math or old work I've done on it. I haven't done that kind of IT in over 2 years at this point. But it was clearly Don't Ever Buy Anything Else. Do Not Ever Buy Exchange Server Again. Just Use Office 365 Licensing Methanar fucked around with this message at 19:31 on Feb 9, 2018 |
# ? Feb 9, 2018 02:48 |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rp2rhM8YUZY
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# ? Feb 9, 2018 20:34 |
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Careful application of holy water will fix that.
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# ? Feb 10, 2018 04:30 |
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Automatically having Cortana shout at you at max volume was the dumbest loving design decision.
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# ? Feb 11, 2018 03:45 |
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COOL CORN posted:Automatically having Cortana shout at you at max volume was the dumbest loving design decision. Windows 10s full of similarly brain dead design decisions.
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# ? Feb 11, 2018 16:24 |
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Windows 10 went from exceptionally promising at release to full-blown trash fire and unfortunately for humanity there wont be any real blowback against MS because of their massive market saturation. Oh well.
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# ? Feb 11, 2018 16:40 |
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I want to sit in ltsb 2015 forever
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# ? Feb 11, 2018 16:50 |
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I don't hate Win 10 that much aside from all the settings menus and the actual setup of it. So, really everything that pertains to my job.
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 14:01 |
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COOL CORN posted:I don't hate Win 10 that much aside from all the settings menus and the actual setup of it. Do you not use MDT, or some other imaging platform?
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 16:01 |
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The Fool posted:Do you not use MDT, or some other imaging platform? I mean, yeah, I do. But still all the phone-menu-esque Settings menus in Windows 10 are garbage.
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 16:06 |
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The Fool posted:Do you not use MDT, or some other imaging platform? Real q is there any other imaging platform worth considering for windows deployment?
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 16:36 |
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The Fool posted:Do you not use MDT, or some other imaging platform? Yeah but it's a poo poo sandwich trying to configure Windows so all your settings aren't reset for every new user profile. And its hosed how easy it is to break your install so sysprep craps out.
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 16:42 |
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NevergirlsOFFICIAL posted:Real q is there any other imaging platform worth considering for windows deployment? Dell's KACE appliance is the true light and the way edit-- if you're a Dell shop
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 16:48 |
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COOL CORN posted:Dell's KACE appliance is the true light and the way Really? I have heard horror stories about KACE.
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 16:57 |
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KACE
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 17:43 |
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If you're going to do imaging and recovery with ancient tech, use good ancient tech.
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 17:50 |
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Potato Salad posted:I want to sit in ltsb 2015 forever LTSB 4 Lyfe They really should have released the LTSB as "Enterprise Edition," but that would require admitting that not all shops want the Windows store on every workstation.
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 18:11 |
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You mean to say the Xbox app isn't mission critical to my enterprise?!
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 18:34 |
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Let me clarify - I last used KACE 5 years ago and inherited it from someone who had done the config already, so maybe that's why I have fond memories of it.
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 18:51 |
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GreenNight posted:You mean to say the Xbox app isn't mission critical to my enterprise?! how else do you manage your xbox cheevos though?
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 19:11 |
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NevergirlsOFFICIAL posted:
I like that one. Going to da cloud is usually more expensive than small clients expect it to be and invariably more expensive than rolling your own Exchange/Sharepoint/SBS/postfix/dovecot/exim/DIY-setup. I don't know where the optimism about cutting costs even comes from but it's almost never justified. The same is true for larger companies (i.e >a couple thousand seats) who end up paying a lot due to sheer volume but they usually also have a dedicated licensing person around who shoujld see that coming (which they mostly don't). It's weird. I don't hear Microsoft sales people say "hosted services === cheaper" ever these days but the idea is quite persistent. Other topics I wrote words about on an internal blag in the past -How to set up a phishing campaign to train your employees at recognizing really obvious scams ... in under 30 minutes (subtitle: 'are you ready to face that people will click anything') -How to get every admin to embrace automation (Tough, I have had limited success by asking each to find something simple they do periodically and then teaching them all the same basics and adding specifics individually on how to automate their thing away after. Once they know the sweet taste of victory over boredom, repetition, their professional demise a lot are motivated enough to keep going with self study/ripping off stack overflow -Thought experiment: you're run over by a bus. How do you make sure your company IT survives this inconvenience? -Finding out who is uploading a Sponge Bob bit torrent through the company WLAN - a quick start in network monitoring -Locking down company laptops so Henry's nephew doesn't install a bunch of bit torrent stuff again - a primer in device hardening and compliance -
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# ? Feb 14, 2018 07:22 |
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Old Binsby posted:
I guess it depends on what you consider "small," and what exactly you're doing (the fewer application servers you have to support, the better) but anything under 30ish employees is gonna be cheaper to have in the cloud. Anything under 20 is going to be way cheaper. Then again, it's been a couple of years since I got out of small shop, so maybe things have changed.
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# ? Feb 14, 2018 08:01 |
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Old Binsby posted:help me with this one pls I like that one. Going to da cloud is usually more expensive than small clients expect it to be and invariably more expensive than rolling your own Exchange/Sharepoint/SBS/postfix/dovecot/exim/DIY-setup. I don't know where the optimism about cutting costs even comes from but it's almost never justified. The same is true for larger companies (i.e >a couple thousand seats) who end up paying a lot due to sheer volume but they usually also have a dedicated licensing person around who shoujld see that coming (which they mostly don't). It's weird. I don't hear Microsoft sales people say "hosted services === cheaper" ever these days but the idea is quite persistent. Other topics I wrote words about on an internal blag in the past -How to set up a phishing campaign to train your employees at recognizing really obvious scams ... in under 30 minutes (subtitle: 'are you ready to face that people will click anything') -How to get every admin to embrace automation (Tough, I have had limited success by asking each to find something simple they do periodically and then teaching them all the same basics and adding specifics individually on how to automate their thing away after. Once they know the sweet taste of victory over boredom, repetition, their professional demise a lot are motivated enough to keep going with self study/ripping off stack overflow -Thought experiment: you're run over by a bus. How do you make sure your company IT survives this inconvenience? -Finding out who is uploading a Sponge Bob bit torrent through the company WLAN - a quick start in network monitoring -Locking down company laptops so Henry's nephew doesn't install a bunch of bit torrent stuff again - a primer in device hardening and compliance - [/quote] This is good stuff let me chew on it for a while
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# ? Feb 14, 2018 14:50 |
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I think the Cloud = Cheaper argument gets overdone and is too simple. But Exchange Online is cheaper (at least at the numbers that would qualify as a small shop) than doing it yourself properly - e.g. distributed data centres, some form of message filtering, a smarthost to ensure your sender reputation is always good, staff time to patch the servers, storing the mail databases on something durable etc. You're going to lose the battle if you're trying to make a bunch of Office 365 licensing and EM+S come out cheaper than a single SBS box in the corner that's not been touched for years. If you drift further into product evangelist territory rather than looking purely at economics then there's a value associated with having a small IT team not having to worry about email availability or capacity planning, and taking a few months out every few years to handle hardware replacement and migration of services. Thanks Ants fucked around with this message at 15:41 on Feb 14, 2018 |
# ? Feb 14, 2018 15:38 |
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Thanks Ants posted:I think the Cloud = Cheaper argument gets overdone and is too simple. But Exchange Online is cheaper (at least at the numbers that would qualify as a small shop) than doing it yourself properly - e.g. distributed data centres, some form of message filtering, a smarthost to ensure your sender reputation is always good, staff time to patch the servers, storing the mail databases on something durable etc. You're right I'm not arguing agains the economics of scale or in favor of running your own stuff on ancient hardware in a corner of the office. I just thought it funny that for some reason a lot of middle managers seem to have the idea ingrained that moving to cloud stuff means instant cheaper everything, even or especially in the short term. Thinking about it, the problem is probably that while you don't have to buy servers up front, of course you do still need to pay for licenses. Everything else is gravy: don't have to spend hours configuring a network, databases, proxies, load balancers, backup, database copies, virus scanning, spam filtering and so on. That's all very nice but the only cost that gets cut when you move is at the very front and it's a once-a-decade expense anyway. Whatever all of the rest costs is baked into the second item, the licenses, which is suddenly payable per month or year instead of sporadically at the end of a long hardware lifecycle process. I guess I'm answering my own question but no matter the gains in other areas, the total on the first monthly or yearly bill is usually higher than was expected.
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# ? Feb 14, 2018 15:58 |
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I managed some SBS and Exchange boxes like 7-8 years ago and my god I would never do that again. Im sure its better now (probably NOT!), but Office 365 has been my savior over the last years. And gently caress outlook. How in hell did MS make it worse, not better?!
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# ? Feb 14, 2018 16:15 |
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Having office 365 let’s you get and retain more qualified IT staff because no one competent will want to manage SBS
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# ? Feb 14, 2018 16:26 |
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redeyes posted:I managed some SBS and Exchange boxes like 7-8 years ago and my god I would never do that again. Im sure its better now (probably NOT!), but Office 365 has been my savior over the last years. And gently caress (insert microsoft product name here). How in hell did MS make it worse, not better?! fixed that for ya pal.
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# ? Feb 14, 2018 16:55 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 03:25 |
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I'm incompetent and do not want to run SBS anymore.
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# ? Feb 14, 2018 17:05 |