What Are You Doing Right Now
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Just saw this tool and am playing with it. I like it.
http://speed.cloudflare.com/ -
@jmoore said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Just saw this tool and am playing with it. I like it.
http://speed.cloudflare.com/sexy, but I am not seeing anything to test upload.
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@JaredBusch said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@jmoore said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Just saw this tool and am playing with it. I like it.
http://speed.cloudflare.com/sexy, but I am not seeing anything to test upload.
Yeah, all the stats in the world only do so much good if it only gives half of the picture.
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@JaredBusch said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@jmoore said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Just saw this tool and am playing with it. I like it.
http://speed.cloudflare.com/sexy, but I am not seeing anything to test upload.
On their blog they said there was issue giving incorrect results for very fast connections so they disabled it temporarily.
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On a conference call discussing a new marketing design for our company.
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Started realizing (aside from what everyone has told me about my job) how drained I am after working, and how much I don't really enjoy this.
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@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Started realizing (aside from what everyone has told me about my job) how drained I am after working, and how much I don't really enjoy this.
Start training yourself for development if your still interested in that. Actually you should always be doing that as it gives you more options if you become tired of present role and just makes you more valuable. Rarely is there a downside to learning too much.
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@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Started realizing (aside from what everyone has told me about my job) how drained I am after working, and how much I don't really enjoy this.
What you do is a HUGE part of your life. 25-40% of your time. If you don't love it, get out and find something that makes you happy. Whether it's a different company, job, career, location - it's one of the most important things in life to figure out. It's such a huge part of your life, don't let it be something that doesn't make you happy.
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@jmoore said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Started realizing (aside from what everyone has told me about my job) how drained I am after working, and how much I don't really enjoy this.
Start training yourself for development if your still interested in that. Actually you should always be doing that as it gives you more options if you become tired of present role and just makes you more valuable. Rarely is there a downside to learning too much.
I know what you mean, but you can be knocked back at job interviews because you're over qualified / over experienced.
That's happened to me in the past, it annoyed me, but I never felt disappointed because of it. -
@siringo said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@jmoore said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Started realizing (aside from what everyone has told me about my job) how drained I am after working, and how much I don't really enjoy this.
Start training yourself for development if your still interested in that. Actually you should always be doing that as it gives you more options if you become tired of present role and just makes you more valuable. Rarely is there a downside to learning too much.
I know what you mean, but you can be knocked back at job interviews because you're over qualified / over experienced.
That's happened to me in the past, it annoyed me, but I never felt disappointed because of it.That's bad logic, though. That can happen for any perceived reason. The more experience and skill you have, the more YOU control the narrative. You can always not mention experience that you have, but you would have to lie to make up experience that you don't have.
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@siringo said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@jmoore said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Started realizing (aside from what everyone has told me about my job) how drained I am after working, and how much I don't really enjoy this.
Start training yourself for development if your still interested in that. Actually you should always be doing that as it gives you more options if you become tired of present role and just makes you more valuable. Rarely is there a downside to learning too much.
I know what you mean, but you can be knocked back at job interviews because you're over qualified / over experienced.
That's happened to me in the past, it annoyed me, but I never felt disappointed because of it.That's bad logic, though. That can happen for any perceived reason. The more experience and skill you have, the more YOU control the narrative.
No, not always. I recently went for a project management role.I could tell I had more experience than the person who was in charge of the group and who was doing the interviews, if for no other reason than I was probably close to 20 years older than he.
I was unsuccessful and since found out who got the role.
I'm fairly sure I was knocked back because the manager of the group suspected that dealing with me due to the level and length of my experience may just have been too awkward.
In that interview I was more professional and personable than any of the other interviewers, with the exception of one, who was closer to my age group.
I wasn't the type they were looking for & there was nothing I could do to change that.
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son's been tested for this bloody covid mongrel. he could have anything, but all of a sudden it becomes very real.
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@siringo said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@siringo said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@jmoore said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Started realizing (aside from what everyone has told me about my job) how drained I am after working, and how much I don't really enjoy this.
Start training yourself for development if your still interested in that. Actually you should always be doing that as it gives you more options if you become tired of present role and just makes you more valuable. Rarely is there a downside to learning too much.
I know what you mean, but you can be knocked back at job interviews because you're over qualified / over experienced.
That's happened to me in the past, it annoyed me, but I never felt disappointed because of it.That's bad logic, though. That can happen for any perceived reason. The more experience and skill you have, the more YOU control the narrative.
No, not always. I recently went for a project management role.I could tell I had more experience than the person who was in charge of the group and who was doing the interviews, if for no other reason than I was probably close to 20 years older than he.
I was unsuccessful and since found out who got the role.
I'm fairly sure I was knocked back because the manager of the group suspected that dealing with me due to the level and length of my experience may just have been too awkward.
In that interview I was more professional and personable than any of the other interviewers, with the exception of one, who was closer to my age group.
I wasn't the type they were looking for & there was nothing I could do to change that.
that may all be true, but what Scott said is still true.
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@siringo said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
son's been tested for this bloody covid mongrel. he could have anything, but all of a sudden it becomes very real.
Hope he's ok!
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Switch choices.
48 port "Core" switch, VLAN routing (L3 capable) 10GB Base-T
Going to be replacing a 7 year old Cisco Catalyst 3560 1GB switch.What's peoples "Go to" Manufacturer for switches? I normally go Netgear.
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@hobbit666 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Switch choices.
48 port "Core" switch, VLAN routing (L3 capable) 10GB Base-T
Going to be replacing a 7 year old Cisco Catalyst 3560 1GB switch.What's peoples "Go to" Manufacturer for switches? I normally go Netgear.
Ubiquiti. https://switch.ui.com/
Software defined networking is the way to go. That's why the Cisco Meraki products are almost business standard where Cisco is deployed, but I don't like paying the monthly fee that Meraki charges. Plus, Ubiquiti still has ssh capability, if needed, for their devices.A well-defined SDN will allow expansion by easily adopting new devices and provisioning those devices to match your existing hardware, or stretch your footprint as with VPNs. For your specific request, I'd get the US-48-500W since adding PoE now will help you not buy a PoE later when you need that function, such as when adding phones or security cameras.
One of the absolute coolest things that ubiquiti has is this feature where it integrates an AR to your cell phone to help you find wtf is plugged in. Check it out:
https://prd-www-cdn.ubnt.com/media/static/media/bg.e5ecc7ca.mp4 -
@Grey said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
One of the absolute coolest things that ubiquiti has is this feature where it integrates an AR to your cell phone to help you find wtf is plugged in. Check it out:
https://prd-www-cdn.ubnt.com/media/static/media/bg.e5ecc7ca.mp4This is super cool. I don't think I'd ever use it... but it's awesome nonetheless.
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@hobbit666 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
What's peoples "Go to" Manufacturer for switches? I normally go Netgear.
@scottalanmiller likes Netgear, I hate them. Different life experiences with them is all.
I would go the Ubiquiti EdgeSwitch.
Depending on what you actually mean by core would change up the recommendations for specific units. But they have the entire spectrum covered.
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Closing on the house tomorrow. Got my ubiquiti equipment ready
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@wirestyle22 nice