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CLAM DOWN posted:uh isn't the cloud just magically everywhere and it runs my email? I had a project maanger once who had a DBA for me so I could do a propf of concept on a new tool. When I asked him if he also ordered the servers the application and datbase should run on he looked at me as if hadn't ever heard of the concept of hardware. He really didn't understand why I needed a server to install the application/database on. I tried explaining it in several ways but he only started understanding it somewhat when I asked him: "what should I do with this cd you just gave me, throw it in the air and hope it installs itself in the cloud?"
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# ¿ Jan 7, 2016 20:18 |
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# ¿ May 4, 2024 17:31 |
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Moey posted:
Sounds like the dev who reset one of my applications production service accounts so he could use in the dev and test environments and locking out the actual production environment. Still can't believe he did not get fired over that (or even a warning for that matter).
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# ¿ Jan 7, 2016 22:58 |
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flosofl posted:You better be using it for a hell of a lot more than just managing device configurations. Same with Netcool. Unless you have a "here's millions of dollars. Do what you want with it" budget. Indeed, it's really expensive, just as the rest of their BTO suite. If you have the money, it's totally worth it though. At my previous job we had NA, NNM, BSM, OMI, SiteScope, BPM, RUM, Operations Orchestration, Server Automation, uCMDB and ServiceManager all integrated. Thats some powerfull poo poo but drat that pricetag.
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# ¿ Jan 9, 2016 18:36 |
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stubblyhead posted:High five BTO suite buddy. I agree totally, I would never advocate using NA only for configuration management. That would be like getting a Swiss army knife and only using the toothpick. My company does a bunch of BTO consulting, let me know if you're ever looking to move back into that arena. If you know what you're doing with it and aren't a total dick we've probably got a place for you. I'm not a complete jerk, not retarded and worked with the tools from pre-HP era. Only thing is I'm living in Europe, do you guys have offices over here as well? I worked with uCMDB for a year or 2 and can do pretty much anything except writing discovery pattern from scratch. Got almost 10 year experience with designing, building, configuring and maintaining BSM, SiteScope, BPM and RUM and have minor knowledge of OMi. Most of my experience with the other tools are integrating them into 1 big happy eco-system. I love the potential of the BTO suite, you can almost do anything with it.
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# ¿ Jan 10, 2016 10:35 |
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stubblyhead posted:Our only physical location is in Austin, everyone else (myself included) is remote. I don't believe we've got anyone currently in Europe, or really anywhere outside the US tbh. We were angling for a project with a company in Germany that never really went anywhere though, so I would imagine something could probably be worked out. We mostly do OO/CSA with a little SA and DMA here and there, and so far as I know we don't have a ton of expertise with the stuff you've used--I myself have never really touched any of it aside from a tiny bit of uCMDB. I can talk to my boss if you think you might be interested. Feel free to PM me or email, username at gmail. dropped you a PM, thanks!
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# ¿ Jan 11, 2016 10:57 |
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CLAM DOWN posted:This looks like the desk of a serial killer or coop student. Seconded. Not a desk from someone who works in IT.
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# ¿ Jan 14, 2016 18:17 |
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Moey posted:Just because you are a slob and cover your desk in anime figurines, doesn't mean everyone else has to. My company has a free seating / clean desk policy and none of the desks are as clean as the one in that picture. I wish I could have some sort of personal poo poo on my desk though.
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# ¿ Jan 14, 2016 18:31 |
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Guys chill out. No need to act like end users in this thread
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# ¿ Jan 14, 2016 18:47 |
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Kashuno posted:Finally have a new person starting Monday and I will no longer have to worry about help desk stuff and only worry about sys/network admin stuff. Finally. This new person will know nothing and you need to spoonfeed him for at least 2-3 months. If you're lucky he'll pick it up from there and you'll only have to help him a few times per week for the rest of the year. If you're unlucky he'll be at your desk multiple times per day until either you quit or get him fired. Hth.
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# ¿ Feb 4, 2016 21:01 |
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GreenNight posted:He'll spend 3 days troubleshooting one printer while you take all the other user calls. and there's nothing wrong with it
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# ¿ Feb 4, 2016 21:10 |
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Crossposting from the resume and interview thread because I kind of am in a hurry and this thread gets a lot more attention so it seems. LochNessMonster posted:After a week or 2-3 hunting for a new job I'm finding myself to be in a somewhat difficult situation and I was hoping to get some goon advice.
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# ¿ Feb 10, 2016 11:38 |
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Alchenar posted:Just straight up ask "if you make me an offer how soon will you need a response?'" Company 3 unfortunately can't move it forward, I asked them but they want to bring in a guy who's only available on fridays. Next week I'm in a training so can't make time for an interview so it'll be the week after. I tried for this week but that didn't work out for them. Second interview with company 1 went pretty well. They want to hire me but made me a really low salary offer (20% lower than what ai currently earn and they roughly know my range). Told them I'm not accepting that offer and will get back to them in the week after my training. They already told me it's just a first offer and they really want to make it work, so I guess I'm able to get a decent offer if I want to go work for them. I (feel like I) am not in the position to tell company 3 to hurry up though. They can probably get people with a similar set of skills but I don't have many options with companies like them but would love to work for them. Company 1 and 2 can't find a lot of people with the skills they want (and I have) so hopefully they don't mind waiting a bit longer. DigitalMocking posted:You can go one of two ways. I'm not sure if option 2 is legal in the country I live in (not the US). I could probably get away with option 1 since both companies really seem to want to hire me.
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# ¿ Feb 10, 2016 17:16 |
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DigitalMocking posted:Not sure what country you live in, but you can always decline an offer before starting, or you can just quit on day 0. :p Its not in the best taste, but I do see it done from time to time. You're right. I looked it up and depending on the contract I can quit without reason or consequences in the first 1-2 months. An employer can terminate a contract during the same period. I agree it's in poor taste and don't plan on doing that. The CEO already called me to follow up on my 2nd meeting though. Told him I have another interview lined up and will get back to him in 2 weeks. He sounded like he wanted me to come back tomorrow and sign.
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# ¿ Feb 10, 2016 19:51 |
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KillHour posted:The amount of people that actually believe this is astounding. This is indeed retarded and there are so many people who believe this. It can only happen if the higher tax bracket means paying more than 100% tax on the money taxed by that bracket (i.e. never ever) or if a higher tax bracket means you lose specific welfare benefits that are higher than what you gain (only applicable in disgusting socialist states like the european union).
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# ¿ Feb 10, 2016 19:56 |
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H110Hawk posted:Mech-eng is great. All you need is some kind of experience. I would venture a guess half the people at work don't have 'CompSci'-ish degrees. Half of my managers have a psychology degree and some just just even had some kind of music degree.... All of them just rolled into management some way or the other. Most even without IT related experiences. Half of the IT engineers here have generic degrees, the other half IT related degrees. Experience is more or less the only thing that matters.
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# ¿ Feb 14, 2016 18:15 |
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CLAM DOWN posted:I'm jealous, because cars and commuting via car really does suck. Get a motorcycle for your commute. Lanesplitting owns.
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# ¿ Feb 16, 2016 21:23 |
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CLAM DOWN posted:Motorcycles are for idiots with an suicidal deathwish Motorcycles = freedom. Do you hate freedom? Do you hate America????
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# ¿ Feb 16, 2016 22:21 |
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I have it turned off completely as well. Does more bad than good.
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# ¿ Feb 17, 2016 18:11 |
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Been reading Turtlicious' adventures/nightmare for the past few pages and I really can't wrap my mind around the fact that this company relies on IT that's set up as a house of cards. Personally I just jumped ship and started as a senior consultant at a new company. First week was pretty low level, setting up my HP zbook 17 g2, installing some virtual boxes, docker/vantage and setting up some virtual machines to learn the new applications I'll be working with the next few years. Coming from a generic dell latitude this hp zbook is a loving beast. I'm starting at my first customer tomorrow, teaching/helping several hundred devops teams on how to set up / enhance their application and infra monitoring. LochNessMonster fucked around with this message at 20:53 on Mar 7, 2016 |
# ¿ Mar 7, 2016 20:21 |
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Sefal posted:Ja, ik ben nederlands. It kinda depends on what your experience/education is. If you have a bachelor's degree you should be making 2250-2500ish after a year or 2. Sounds like you started with MBO (4 ICT beheer?) which makes 1700 as a starter not that unreasonable. Do you have a company car as well? I'm not familiar with pay outside of the Randstad area so ymmv. If you want to discuss it outside of thethread throw me a PM.
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# ¿ Mar 8, 2016 21:56 |
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stubblyhead posted:It was a startup that laid me off. The wife and I are looking forward to the added stability a going concern might supply. You can still call him and tell him you heard he got a new job and tell him it's too bad since you looked forward working with him again. It's either the money or he ran into some red flags at your new company which made him bolt. Call him to find out if you should start looking or if he just jumped ship for the money.
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# ¿ Mar 11, 2016 09:41 |
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stubblyhead posted:Here's what you do. Buy an iPhone. Smash the screen. Call support. Take good notes on what they say, and repeat to the interviewer. Pretending to have an iphone thats smashed is a cheaper solution with the same result. Less amusing for the thread though...
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# ¿ Mar 13, 2016 21:39 |
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Internet Explorer posted:Alright, so since I am too lazy/busy to start a monitoring/logging thread, I am just going to post my Splunk questions here for now. https://forums.somethingawful.com/showthread.php?threadid=3731330 There's the monitoring thread, altough it's not that active. Unfortunately I'm not very familiar with splunk yet so I can't help you there.
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# ¿ Mar 14, 2016 23:30 |
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RyuHimora posted:For instance, someone's been working at Company A for a substantial amount of time, with good performance reviews. One day the boss shows up, gives the victim employee a list of reasons why the company is fed up with them (which are immediately recognizable as bullshit) and has them escorted out of the building. For the sake of the conversation, let's put aside the lawsuit possibilites. If the employee gets an interview with Company B, how should they handle being asked about why they left the previous job? If they tell the truth, that they were fired without reason or unfairly or whatever, that seems like badmouthing the previous company. But if they lie, that's a lie, and almost certain to lose them the job. I know you want to set aside the possible lawsuit options but the only right thing for the employee to do is lawyer up. Besides severence pay, you want a lawyer to make agreements about how the company and employee will regard eachother in the future. For example no bad references or mentioning any of the bullshit. I've been in a situation like this and if this isn't 100% hypothetical: lawyer up. There is no company loyalty to employees, only damage control. They don't see you as a person but as a liability. Don't think they won't completely gently caress you over if that suits them best, because they will if they think they can get away with it.
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# ¿ Mar 15, 2016 08:09 |
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Tab8715 posted:Agreed, while I would do the same I'm curious - how would you portray that sort of history to a prospective employer? Say you were in a dead end. No career opportunities and you wanted a change of scenery.
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# ¿ Mar 15, 2016 08:51 |
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RyuHimora posted:I guess I was thinking about the situation wrong, because this seems like the right answer. My original thinking was "What does the employee do while the lawsuit is happening", which is why I specified to leave the legal stuff aside, but now it appears that was impossible. Glad it's just something you were thinking about and not actually happening. It's a lovely situation to be in. As to what an employee can due during the lawsuit is fairly straight forward. 1) play along and sccept you were fired. 2) say you don't agree with their reasoning and tell them you'll contact your attorney. Mention you want to continue to work for the company. Either they'll escort you out or they'll let you work there until the company lawyer settles things with employee lawyer. Option 2 is fairly common in my country, but I from what I hear it's not common in the US.
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# ¿ Mar 15, 2016 21:44 |
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Japanese Dating Sim posted:US at-will employment owns. You can be fired in at-will states for no reason at all, and in fact that's a recommended way for employers to fire people so as to not accidentally cite a protected status. Out of curiosity, is there any chance you get severence pay in court, or work something out between lawyers outside of court? Or is it more of a tough luck deal with it kinda thing?
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# ¿ Mar 15, 2016 22:32 |
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DigitalMocking posted:I fired a guy for literally doing a bump of coke on his desk as I walked in the door with a customer in at at-will state. I must admit the at will concept sounds pretty crazy to me from an employee point of view. This puts things in perspective though.
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# ¿ Mar 16, 2016 14:52 |
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jaegerx posted:Working in IT 4.0: The cloud solves everything Working in IT 4.0: Thinking out of the cloud.
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# ¿ Mar 20, 2016 17:52 |
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Vulture Culture posted:You're not gonna put a non-technical manager on these questions. The company I used to work for did put a non-technical manager on top of every IT team. Preferably people with Liberal Arts or Philosophy degrees. Because: "a good manager doesn't need to be a SME". Needless to say these people were responsible for taking every technical decision and a lot of them made choices based on their professional opinions (based on nothing). Mind you this was a billion dollar annual profit company. they're laying off 15% of their employees for the 3rd year in a row now
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# ¿ Mar 23, 2016 20:23 |
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psydude posted:Actually that's true, good managers don't need to be subject matter experts. They do, however, have to know when to call on subject matter experts (who have people skills) to explain complex technical ideas in certain meetings. Managers in general shouldn't be SMEs. Knowing you need servers (or the cloud) to host applications would be nice though. I only wish I was kidding about that.
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# ¿ Mar 23, 2016 20:36 |
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Docjowles posted:nah bro just install jenkins and puppet and , you got the devops Ftfy
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# ¿ Mar 24, 2016 22:00 |
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Daylen Drazzi posted:Had our Flight Lead (#3 man in the org after the commander and PM) mention this morning that our monitoring platform is going away...tomorrow. Wants us to come up with a replacement or, if that isn't possible immediately, get rid of vCenter so they can get something like SCOM or NetCool. I looked at my co-worker and just shook my head. I honestly couldn't come up with an adequate response for such blatant stupidity. I work for a company that designs / implements / upgrades monitoring solutions so I feel your pain. "What do you mean, you can't just next next finish install something that works automagically out of the box".
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# ¿ Mar 25, 2016 09:18 |
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H110Hawk posted:During negotiation of my leave my new manager actually used a phrase which implied I didn't want the company to find out they could continue without me. I assume he meant it as a threat? I told him I was insulted by his offer. (Exact words.) He seems to think I'm afraid of quitting or being fired. Congratulations with becoming the most beautiful thing in the world. Also, your boss is an rear end.
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# ¿ Mar 28, 2016 08:45 |
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GnarlyCharlie4u posted:It's a little early for April Fools isn't it?
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# ¿ Mar 30, 2016 21:23 |
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Another vote for not going to HR ever, besides sexual harrasment. Even at the most reputable companies, HR will gently caress you in the rear end without lube
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# ¿ Apr 2, 2016 23:00 |
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GnarlyCharlie4u posted:
I wish I could say the same. At least it learned me some valuable life lessons (and HR hosed up big time so my lawyer ate them for breakfast).
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# ¿ Apr 3, 2016 20:55 |
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Sefal posted:This got a chuckle out of me. It is so true Read the negotiation thread and ask there, it contains a lot of great advice from people who appear to know their poo poo. E: this thread https://forums.somethingawful.com/showthread.php?threadid=3768531 LochNessMonster fucked around with this message at 09:10 on Apr 5, 2016 |
# ¿ Apr 5, 2016 08:49 |
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DigitalMocking posted:I would laugh at them and kill whatever software they're talking about before it was installed. Just quit doing business with retards like this.
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# ¿ Apr 5, 2016 19:19 |
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# ¿ May 4, 2024 17:31 |
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Just found out my previous employer is getting rid of 25% of their employees. First one to leave is the CIO. I guess this is why those faggots are making me contact my lawyer again for not paying me my contractually agreed upon severence pay. (USER WAS PUT ON PROBATION FOR THIS POST)
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# ¿ Apr 6, 2016 18:47 |