What Are You Doing Right Now
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@jmoore a lecturne system really only needs 1 channel of mic preamp. Those will have XLR and TRS out, plus input/output levels. If it's just 1 mic, you don't actually need a multi channel mixer.
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@RojoLoco Yeah true. I can, however, see the need if they want to play music or a vhs/dvd over the house sound there. Someone wants to occasionally. My issue is that for something primarily used as a podium , talking to 500 people when the room is full, it doesn't have a single mic jack on it and only trs and a stereo rca pair on it.
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@Dashrender I try to help her with solutions when I can. I sent her links to Atlas and Bogen sound products so she could familiarize herself with products. I still end up fixing messes like this though. Ok let me correct, its not fixed as I would rip the whole mixer out and replace it but they don't want to spend extra money now.
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@jmoore true. In many applications, I find that regular pro audio gear is a far simpler and less expensive solution than full on contractor/install type gear (like Bogen, etc). But it totally depends on the specific needs.
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For the record - I work with restaurants . Not fucking phones. I know nothing about PBX, Phone systems, Nothing of that sort. My job is to keep Restaurants up, working and making money. - That's it.
The Office has one person ( Service Manager) who takes care of the equipment. (This comes from the owner - too many cooks in the kitchen type bull shit)@DustinB3403 @scottalanmiller : I was told::: It was either The old server that we just changed - gave the PC a IP address, and that PC was the powered off since the switch, with it coming on it created The IP Conflict, restarting the phones and computer in question resolved the issue, and haven't had an issue with the phones. ( this is what i Was told when I asked.) *Kind of makes sense, but wouldn't DHCP be flushed at shut down?
or
The something held on to the IP from DHCP and caused the issue- WE got it back up and going though, so he isnt looking into it.Regardless that was the only thing that was changed and how it was presented to me when I asked.
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@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
For the record - I work with restaurants . Not fucking phones. I know nothing about PBX, Phone systems, Nothing of that sort. My job is to keep Restaurants up, working and making money. - That's it.
The Office has one person ( Service Manager) who takes care of the equipment. (This comes from the owner - too many cooks in the kitchen type bull shit)@DustinB3403 @scottalanmiller : I was told::: It was either The old server that we just changed - gave the PC a IP address, and that PC was the powered off since the switch, with it coming on it created The IP Conflict, restarting the phones and computer in question resolved the issue, and haven't had an issue with the phones. ( this is what i Was told when I asked.) *Kind of makes sense, but wouldn't DHCP be flushed at shut down?
or
The something held on to the IP from DHCP and caused the issue- WE got it back up and going though, so he isnt looking into it.Regardless that was the only thing that was changed and how it was presented to me when I asked.
DHCP isn't flushed ever (really) but you can have DHCP leases expire and get renewed. The life of a DHCP lease is what could cause a client to get an IP address, go offline and have another statically assigned device come online and use the same address.
IP conflicts are generally because 1 device has a reservation, while another device is statically assigned and both are on the same network at the same time.
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@DustinB3403 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
For the record - I work with restaurants . Not fucking phones. I know nothing about PBX, Phone systems, Nothing of that sort. My job is to keep Restaurants up, working and making money. - That's it.
The Office has one person ( Service Manager) who takes care of the equipment. (This comes from the owner - too many cooks in the kitchen type bull shit)@DustinB3403 @scottalanmiller : I was told::: It was either The old server that we just changed - gave the PC a IP address, and that PC was the powered off since the switch, with it coming on it created The IP Conflict, restarting the phones and computer in question resolved the issue, and haven't had an issue with the phones. ( this is what i Was told when I asked.) *Kind of makes sense, but wouldn't DHCP be flushed at shut down?
or
The something held on to the IP from DHCP and caused the issue- WE got it back up and going though, so he isnt looking into it.Regardless that was the only thing that was changed and how it was presented to me when I asked.
DHCP isn't flushed ever (really) but you can have DHCP leases expire and get renewed. The life of a DHCP lease is what could cause a client to get an IP address, go offline and have another statically assigned device come online and use the same address.
IP conflicts are generally because 1 device has a reservation, while another device is statically assigned and both are on the same network at the same time.
Learn something new everyday,
Thanks Dustin. -
Creating a fresh Win 10 VM for Hyper-V training/documentation and listening to Sleep. Also hoping Sleep's guitarist doesn't lose another toe to the diabeetus, he just canceled his other band's tour that kicked off here on Thursday.
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Trying to find the value of some stamps (well a selection of about 4000)
Just to see if I can find one that's worth £1000000000 -
It's old VM killin' time!
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@EddieJennings said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
It's old VM killin' time!
Wait! I'm still using that one!
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@dafyre said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@EddieJennings said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
It's old VM killin' time!
Wait! I'm still using that one!
You had until Friday to tell me.
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Trying to select a switch for the Stores.
Find one then change my mind, look for something else and think "do I really need this advanced"??Requirements are:-
Web Managed
24port
Non-PoE and PoE Version
Layer 3 lite/Layer2+ is a bonus (so I can do some simple routing)Keep going from
Ubiquiti 24 Lite (£160 ish)
HP Office Connect 1920 (£120 ish)
Netgear GS724Tv4 (£106 ish)Then PoE version
Ubiquiti 24 (£390)
HP Office Connect 1920 PoE (£253)
Netgear GS724TPv2 PoE (£205)But then Netgear have the prosafe range
guess I just need to pick one and stick to it
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@dafyre said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@EddieJennings said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
It's old VM killin' time!
Wait! I'm still using that one!
And these things have been powered off 9 months
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@hobbit666 You want something in this line up.
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@EddieJennings but wait I needed to use it yesterday and never got to ask you why I couldn't get to it.
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@DustinB3403 but they cost £320+ why them over the Netgear Prosafe or GS724 range? or the HP ones
what makes the Ubiquiti ones £100 more worth it -
@hobbit666 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@DustinB3403 but they cost £320+ why them over the Netgear Prosafe or GS724 range? or the HP ones
what makes the Ubiquiti ones £100 more worth itBecause Netgear is a joke and HP's aren't much better than the Netgear equipment. I can't help you with the cost, it is the better option.
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@DustinB3403 actually Netgear makes some seriously good stuff. Its our main go to for switching. A big networking lab in NYC has to use it because it outperforms nearly everything.
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@DustinB3403 actually Netgear makes some seriously good stuff. Its our main go to for switching. A big networking lab in NYC has to use it because it outperforms nearly everything.
I've been very happy with the HP switches I've had here for the past 10 years. I replaced them with UBNT mostly because they were cheaper than the HPs I was looking at at the time.