• 5 Votes
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    scottalanmillerS

    @Son-of-Jor-El said in Over Investing Early Can Be Big Time Failure:

    Interesting convo. I can't get into too much detail but in the solar industry it is ESSENTIAL to have the investors lined up. If you don't, you die.

    Even with them lined up, you still want to spend money wisely.

  • If You Have to Ask the Question...

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    BRRABillB

    @s.hackleman said

    I see where he is coming from. Asking a question on this forum can be intimidating. For me personally I love it, I like being proven wrong, I like going to head to head. I have never won a debate with @scottalanmiller, and I like that, I learn from it. From what I have gathered in life a vast majority of people don't like this feeling, and take it personally.

    Same here.

    In fact, there was a little bit where I slowed in asking questions, because of the BS some people posted against me.

    But that didn't last long. I said "F IT" and just posted what I wanted to. I'm here to learn and grow, and if people don't like it, they can ignore me.

    Most people here are happy to help.

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    MattSpellerM

    I usually just power off the server, yank all the drives out, mix em all up and put em back in. I also enjoy testing my backups quite often.

    I'll have to try your method next time!

    šŸ˜‰

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    gjacobseG

    As with any system, you should always swing back around and re-visit issues.

    With the help of the group here, and other resources i hope to go over the GPP and see what I can clean up and improve.

  • Organization and reference tools

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    scottalanmillerS

    @Dashrender said:

    Interesting question. I still wouldn't say that we are cloud based as a core, because I read core as what I'm doing inside my own walls. It appears that to you core means what your LOB app is.

    If you asked the owners / doctors what the core function of your IT was... would they think that it was the LOB or that it was.... other stuff?

    The core is what runs operations, not what IT uses.

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    scottalanmillerS

    How goes your project?

  • It Gets the Job Done

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    @DustinB3403 said in It Gets the Job Done:

    "It gets the job done" could easily fit the bill in the scenario I provided.

    All solutions work, and are OS agnostic. Barco Clickshare, AirTame, Mersive Solstice, ChromeCast etc etc.

    They all work and meet the requirements, some are more expensive than others. But all work and meet the requirements. How much better do "I" have to do than just using "whatever everyone else uses and bought" (no one was ever fired for buying ibm) as the saying goes.

    Right?

    That's my point - that you are defining "working" incorrectly. There are two ways to do it. Does it "meet the minimum" or is it "at least attempted to be done well?"

    No one, outside of IT, ever accepts "doing nothing" as working. It's unique to IT to accept zero evaluation as a guideline for success. If we use normal standards, we'd evaluate if the solution was acceptable based on it being good relative to other options, not evaluated in a vacuum.

    Imagine a chef getting "pass/fail" on making a hamburger in school. Sure, it was uncooked and unedible, but technically ground meat made it onto a piece of bread. No one, ever, would accept that as "getting the job done" of being a chef. He might not manage to make the best burger, but he'd be expected to try and do better than just slapping meat on bread. If he didn't, it would be considered a fail.

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    scottalanmillerS

    It's amazing how many of these bloatware security issues have come up in the past two weeks since we had the comment made of "is removing bloatware worth it" in that one thread. šŸ™‚

  • Running Quickbooks is like....

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    BRRABillB

    LOL, indeed.

  • Firefox: Add-ons

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    MattSpellerM

    Excellent topic

    To add fuel to the fire (though it might have been mentioned already below)

    It simplifies the transition between models and makes of laptop. I like to "generic windows-ify" all my installs so that you use all the MS stuff to manage wifi etc. Then the only transitions you need to coach users on is to new windows versions.

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    hobbit666H

    Going to have a play once the VL has been added.

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    scottalanmillerS

    @Obsolesce said in Making the Most of Your Inverted Pyramid of Doom:

    @scottalanmiller said in Making the Most of Your Inverted Pyramid of Doom:

    Peer-reviewed my behind… This post represents a complete and total spew of utter garbage. Really??? Emotional reactions to ā€œthe problemā€?? ā€œAn IPODā€?? Even suggesting (though not ā€œour best optionā€ dumping all your brand new equipment and moving to a single host?? Please focus on removing your introspective nears and pathetic sarcasm to a minimum. You couldn’t smell the manure stink more had you forcefully shoved your head inside an elephants rear end…. Do the world of Actual IT Professionals a favor and take your biased disinformation to a place where no-one else can be poorly and deceitfully guided by it.
    Sincerely,
    – The World of Truth and Reason

    Emotional reactions such as this guys whole post... nothing but emotion, zero rationale.

    It sounds like someone wasted a million dollars of company money and is trying discredit reality.

    It's called "reverse rationalization" in psychology context. Humans want to believe that we are rational, logical creatures. But most of our decisions are emotionally based and made faster than we can rationalize them. Then, when our decisions are questioned, we go back and our brains try to remember there being logic that we used to make the decision. If there is logic, we recall that logic. When there isn't logic, our brain freaks out and either constructs false logic to make it seem rational, but that often makes it seem even more crazy to outsiders looking at us spouting gibberish. And if our own brains realize the gibberish or this is pointed out, it can actually trigger the fight or flight response when all logic shuts down and we just panic.

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    scottalanmillerS

    @hobbit666 said in The Inverted Pyramid of Doom Challenge:

    Might be suggesting a 3rd party review of the solution so look out for an E-mail NTG šŸ˜„

    @Minion-Queen waits with baited breath.

  • How Do I Describe Being Weird?

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    scottalanmillerS

    @ryanblahnik said:

    I'm open to learning about any area. Networking, Linux and system administration have been some of the most interesting to me so far, and I keep sensing I'll be needing to start a base in programming too.

    I would open a new thread for each topic you are interested in resources for and we can talk about ones that we know or dig up some stuff to check out.

  • Why I Don't Answer My Phone

    Water Closet
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    C

    Phone and e-mail are different tools. Each have their place. I wouldn't consider them interchangeable. It also depends massively on the type of job you have, so that blog post works well for the blogger, but everyone's situation is different. I generally prefer e-mail for all the reasons listed.

    However, downsides of e-mail:

    it is easier to say 'no' to someone by e-mail. People often feel under-pressure to say 'yes' to someone when talking directly. So if I need someone to do something for me, I may ask them by phone as it increases the chances they'll say yes and I'll get what I want. it is easier to ignore someone by e-mail. People have a natural tendency to respond to whatever is facing them, so if you phone someone you're more likely to get a response straight away, whereas an e-mail may go to the back of their 'to-do' list. So if I want someone to do something for me quickly, or I want a quick answer to a question, I'll normally phone them. written evidence of a conversation can be damaging. This is particularly true of internal communications in a company, where, sadly, politics is often very important. There are things I need to discuss of a political nature where it is better that no evidence of the discussion remains.
    lack of subtlety and emotion. Emoticons suck. I add smiley faces to tone down the harshness of some of my e-mails, but it is nothing like human speech. The written word is simply not as powerful as the spoken word.

    These are more reasons for phoning someone mind, not for answering your phone. You might want to treat people as you wish to be treated yourself, but on the other hand business can be something of a dog eat dog world and often you may prefer to just look after your own selfish interests and to hell with the rest.

  • "Reading Back" Technology Purchases

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    scottalanmillerS

    @Dashrender said:

    Sure, but this boils down to the 'You don't know what you don't know' situation.

    Maybe, but you do know if you are looking for advice and engineering insight or not. If not, you have to assume that the priority was not that high. If you want a house built and feel that the design is important we all know that you high a trained architect. If not and you just want to be cheap, you just buy a book of blueprints and hope for the best. But we know what we don't know.

  • 3 Votes
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    scottalanmillerS

    @Dashrender said:

    @scottalanmiller said:

    @Dashrender said:

    I can see doing RAID 6 if you can afford the performance penalty.

    Which you would assume that you can if you can wait for a distant node to write as well.

    By distant, you mean local, as in the same rack?

    Yes, distant meaning outside of the chassis connected over a slow Ethernet link.

  • 4 Votes
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    scottalanmillerS

    @Dashrender said:

    Are you saying that I would skip ever talking to a sales person (until I'm actually read to buy) because the expectation is that I would get everything I would need from the forums consultants?

    I'm saying that salespeople are not part of this process until you are past your design stage. Period. They do not add value but add risk and confusion. No matter what process you use to get your information (research, forums, hiring a consultant...) doesn't matter. What does matter is that salespeople and others who don't have a reason to help you or don't have the resources to help you should not be engaged.

    There isn't an expectation that you will ever get everything that you need. That is a red herring. What matters is salespeople are not where you find what you need and you should never expect them to lead you in that direction. You should get advice from people whose interest is to help you, not from people with the explicit task of misleading you!

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    JaredBuschJ

    @Dashrender said:

    If they are all on the same controller, why does rebooting affect the others? Isn't the controller suppose to managing that?

    The point of auto is to have the AP detect what channels are in use around it and pick the best one. That will obviously be different each time any AP reboots. When the first one reboots, it will immediately affect the ones next to it as the signal drops and the unit around it detect a difference. Then once it powers back on, it has to detect what is around it and then determine what channel to use.

    High density deployments are much different beasts than an office building with 3 or 4 AP scattered around for coverage.