I can't even
-
That's 16.5 years!
-
-
Must be hours, not days. That's insane.
-
@popester said in I can't even:
@scottalanmiller said in I can't even:
That's 16.5 years!
Thats like NT 4 right?
Would have to be, 2000 can't stay up like that!
-
If that is hours, it's 250 days. Still too long, but not so insane.
-
@scottalanmiller said in I can't even:
We just found this on a server of a customer...
damn - you beat me too it.
But I think it's
HOURS:MINUTES:Seconds
so 252 days
-
@popester said in I can't even:
@scottalanmiller said in I can't even:
That's 16.5 years!
Thats like NT 4 right?
Server 2008 is what it is...
-
Unless the OS has been around 16 years it has to be hours.
-
Oh God- how is this thing still running...
-
-
@dbeato said in I can't even:
@gjacobse said in I can't even:
Oh God- how is this thing still running...
Mmm welcome to SMB
Large enterprises don't patch either. Wannacry lately?
-
@tim_g said in I can't even:
@dbeato said in I can't even:
@gjacobse said in I can't even:
Oh God- how is this thing still running...
Mmm welcome to SMB
Large enterprises don't patch either. Wannacry lately?
Same but still you got a point.
-
Found this old article...
Talks about the greatest people in IT. And, like I've spoken about, not one of these people ever came close to ever working in IT. marketing people, programmers, business people, all kinds of things, but no IT. Even Computer Weekly can't identify an IT pro to save their lives.
-
@scottalanmiller said in I can't even:
Found this old article...
Talks about the greatest people in IT. And, like I've spoken about, not one of these people ever came close to ever working in IT. marketing people, programmers, business people, all kinds of things, but no IT. Even Computer Weekly can't identify an IT pro to save their lives.
Yeah - it's why normals lump anyone who works even remotely close to tech into the IT department.
-
@dashrender said in I can't even:
@scottalanmiller said in I can't even:
Found this old article...
Talks about the greatest people in IT. And, like I've spoken about, not one of these people ever came close to ever working in IT. marketing people, programmers, business people, all kinds of things, but no IT. Even Computer Weekly can't identify an IT pro to save their lives.
Yeah - it's why normals lump anyone who works even remotely close to tech into the IT department.
With that approach anyone who uses a toilet must be a plumber!
-
@dashrender said in I can't even:
@scottalanmiller said in I can't even:
Found this old article...
Talks about the greatest people in IT. And, like I've spoken about, not one of these people ever came close to ever working in IT. marketing people, programmers, business people, all kinds of things, but no IT. Even Computer Weekly can't identify an IT pro to save their lives.
Yeah - it's why normals lump anyone who works even remotely close to tech into the IT department.
I take it you feel that all of is normals, not IT. As when asked to vote, a nearly identical list came up from so called IT people themselves, lol.
-
@dustinb3403 said in I can't even:
@dashrender said in I can't even:
@scottalanmiller said in I can't even:
Found this old article...
Talks about the greatest people in IT. And, like I've spoken about, not one of these people ever came close to ever working in IT. marketing people, programmers, business people, all kinds of things, but no IT. Even Computer Weekly can't identify an IT pro to save their lives.
Yeah - it's why normals lump anyone who works even remotely close to tech into the IT department.
With that approach anyone who uses a toilet must be a plumber!
Anyone who OWNS one, more like it. Some of those people we don't know if they ever even used a computer!
-
@scottalanmiller said in I can't even:
Found this old article...
Talks about the greatest people in IT. And, like I've spoken about, not one of these people ever came close to ever working in IT. marketing people, programmers, business people, all kinds of things, but no IT. Even Computer Weekly can't identify an IT pro to save their lives.
A lot of those people started on development... Then moved to business and marketing.
-
@coliver said in I can't even:
@scottalanmiller said in I can't even:
Found this old article...
Talks about the greatest people in IT. And, like I've spoken about, not one of these people ever came close to ever working in IT. marketing people, programmers, business people, all kinds of things, but no IT. Even Computer Weekly can't identify an IT pro to save their lives.
A lot of those people started on development... Then moved to business and marketing.
Right. Development isnβt IT. Totally different things.
-
Itβs like asking who is a famous mechanic, and being told the names of people who designed factories or financed car companies. Not someone whoever fixed a car.