What Are You Doing Right Now
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Finally getting back to a computer during the day. Kiddo has kept us busy the last couple of days!
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IKEA had a section sofa piece on floor model sale. So picking it up.
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We have to go coat shopping.
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About to spin up my OSTickets VM to start customising it, might start using it in Jan
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
We have to go coat shopping.
Once we got there we figured out that my wife is delusional and had no idea why I would own a heavy coat. So we came right back.
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Drinking my morning coffee, reading @scottalanmiller 's SAM Learning Linux Admin segments like a morning paper..
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Just switched from my phone to my laptop as the phone died. Watching my SIL play Tropico 4.
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Getting ready to take my puppy to the vet for his yearly visit.
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OMG, some new poster on SW can't figure out if the so insanely obviously free SpiceWorks software is free, or if it is $500,000 a year to run.
Really? How can you not figure out it is free, just go to the site. And seriously, what software cost $500K a year for one user AND shows ads! This guy actually things that millions of people deploy software at half a million dollars a year? SpiceWorks would be earning TRILLIONS in profits a year. TRILLIONS!!! They'd be doing weird things like funding their own space exploration program and buying other planets. They'd have entire development teams working from undersea research stations in the Mariana Trench... just because they could. Their spokesperson would be the Queen of England and Donald Trump would make them coffee.
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How do people get confused by this?
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Anyone ever use ooma for VoIP at home? My friend does and swears by it. Apparently you pay for the appliance and like 2-3$ a month for the taxes of having a phone number and that's it. Only one phone though.
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@wirestyle22 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Anyone ever use ooma for VoIP at home? My friend does and swears by it. Apparently you pay for the appliance and like 2-3$ a month for the taxes of having a phone number and that's it.
I hve heard of them,... but never looked at them. Had Vonage for years, and when we moved into the house, didn't renew. That was eleven years ago. We have our mobile phones and that is it.
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@wirestyle22 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Anyone ever use ooma for VoIP at home? My friend does and swears by it. Apparently you pay for the appliance and like 2-3$ a month for the taxes of having a phone number and that's it.
So cheap to have a full PBX, as IT folks, why consider anything else? voip.ms plus a hosted FreePBX instance is super powerful, great learning, so many more features and so important for your career, why look at consumer services when you can go to full enterprise for barely more money (couple extra dollars?)
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@wirestyle22 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Anyone ever use ooma for VoIP at home? My friend does and swears by it. Apparently you pay for the appliance and like 2-3$ a month for the taxes of having a phone number and that's it.
So cheap to have a full PBX, as IT folks, why consider anything else? voip.ms plus a hosted FreePBX instance is super powerful, great learning, so many more features and so important for your career, why look at consumer services when you can go to full enterprise for barely more money (couple extra dollars?)
I wouldn't buy it but i think its kind of nice for non-tech people to come into this century
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I can understand why non-IT people don't do a PBX for their own home, but for IT people I pretty much only understand doing nothing at all or going all out. Your phones are one of the few home production systems that you have to run. We make such a big deal of our home labs and normally we have to contrive any use case for them (when do we REALLY need a wiki at home, or Active Directory or even backups?) but phones, firewalls and mass media storage are the exceptions where we can run production, heavily used things at home to get experience that rivals office experience. Why pass it up?
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@scottalanmiller Considering after my initial setup, setting it up at my relatives places so we can video conference
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@wirestyle22 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@wirestyle22 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Anyone ever use ooma for VoIP at home? My friend does and swears by it. Apparently you pay for the appliance and like 2-3$ a month for the taxes of having a phone number and that's it.
So cheap to have a full PBX, as IT folks, why consider anything else? voip.ms plus a hosted FreePBX instance is super powerful, great learning, so many more features and so important for your career, why look at consumer services when you can go to full enterprise for barely more money (couple extra dollars?)
I wouldn't buy it but i think its kind of nice for non-tech people to come into this century
Only concern is that it is a router and takes over your network.
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@wirestyle22 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@scottalanmiller Considering after my initial setup, setting it up at my relatives places so we can video conference
With your own PBX? Yeah, that's an awesome free additional feature.
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@wirestyle22 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Anyone ever use ooma for VoIP at home? My friend does and swears by it. Apparently you pay for the appliance and like 2-3$ a month for the taxes of having a phone number and that's it. Only one phone though.
My doc uses it. It's not only one phone. If you connect it to the wiring in your house, you can enable all phones in the house. He's had it for several years as a secondary line. He seems to like it.
This is akin to Magic Jack - I used that back when it was new - it worked OK.
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@Dashrender said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@wirestyle22 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Anyone ever use ooma for VoIP at home? My friend does and swears by it. Apparently you pay for the appliance and like 2-3$ a month for the taxes of having a phone number and that's it. Only one phone though.
My doc uses it. It's not only one phone. If you connect it to the wiring in your house, you can enable all phones in the house. He's had it for several years as a secondary line. He seems to like it.
This is akin to Magic Jack - I used that back when it was new - it worked OK.
That's still one phone, it's just one analogue phone and once you go to old school analogue phones you can put as many handsets on the line as you want. But pick them all up at once and you realize they are all the same phone. Not separate phones like we have in the digital or VoIP worlds. Just lots of instances of the same phone.
And requires you to stay on analogue phones!