A different mindset
-
@Pete-S said in A different mindset:
@Pete-S said in A different mindset:
@scottalanmiller said in A different mindset:
@StuartJordan said in A different mindset:
I feel quite happy that I have saw a lot of history of how hardware and software has developed to this day, and you have seen more then I have. Like people today won't know what a ps/2 mouse is or a serial based mouse lol.
I still end up with those from time to time!
I use one almost every day - a Keytronic keyboard. About 20 years old.
And PS/2 is the "new" stuff. Original PC keyboard uses a 5 pin DIN connector.
I had a nine pin "joystick" connector in 1987.
-
@scottalanmiller said in A different mindset:
@Pete-S said in A different mindset:
@Pete-S said in A different mindset:
@scottalanmiller said in A different mindset:
@StuartJordan said in A different mindset:
I feel quite happy that I have saw a lot of history of how hardware and software has developed to this day, and you have seen more then I have. Like people today won't know what a ps/2 mouse is or a serial based mouse lol.
I still end up with those from time to time!
I use one almost every day - a Keytronic keyboard. About 20 years old.
And PS/2 is the "new" stuff. Original PC keyboard uses a 5 pin DIN connector.
I had a nine pin "joystick" connector in 1987.
That was called the gamepad connector. Can't remember what kind of gamepad it was from though.No, wait. It was probably the game port.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Game_portOnly 9 pin connector was the dsub connector which was the serial port, where the mouse was connected. I don't think the PC ever had any serial keyboards.
-
@Pete-S said in A different mindset:
@scottalanmiller said in A different mindset:
@Pete-S said in A different mindset:
@Pete-S said in A different mindset:
@scottalanmiller said in A different mindset:
@StuartJordan said in A different mindset:
I feel quite happy that I have saw a lot of history of how hardware and software has developed to this day, and you have seen more then I have. Like people today won't know what a ps/2 mouse is or a serial based mouse lol.
I still end up with those from time to time!
I use one almost every day - a Keytronic keyboard. About 20 years old.
And PS/2 is the "new" stuff. Original PC keyboard uses a 5 pin DIN connector.
I had a nine pin "joystick" connector in 1987.
That was called the gamepad connector. Can't remember what kind of gamepad it was from though.No, wait. It was probably the game port.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Game_portOnly 9 pin connector was the dsub connector which was the serial port, where the mouse was connected. I don't think the PC ever had any serial keyboards.
Nope, nine pin. Wasn't a PC.
-
@Pete-S said in A different mindset:
@scottalanmiller said in A different mindset:
@Pete-S said in A different mindset:
@Pete-S said in A different mindset:
@scottalanmiller said in A different mindset:
@StuartJordan said in A different mindset:
I feel quite happy that I have saw a lot of history of how hardware and software has developed to this day, and you have seen more then I have. Like people today won't know what a ps/2 mouse is or a serial based mouse lol.
I still end up with those from time to time!
I use one almost every day - a Keytronic keyboard. About 20 years old.
And PS/2 is the "new" stuff. Original PC keyboard uses a 5 pin DIN connector.
I had a nine pin "joystick" connector in 1987.
That was called the gamepad connector. Can't remember what kind of gamepad it was from though.No, wait. It was probably the game port.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Game_portOnly 9 pin connector was the dsub connector which was the serial port, where the mouse was connected. I don't think the PC ever had any serial keyboards.
https://www.retrorgb.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/mysza.jpg
-
@Pete-S said in A different mindset:
@scottalanmiller said in A different mindset:
@StuartJordan said in A different mindset:
I feel quite happy that I have saw a lot of history of how hardware and software has developed to this day, and you have seen more then I have. Like people today won't know what a ps/2 mouse is or a serial based mouse lol.
I still end up with those from time to time!
I use one almost every day - a Keytronic keyboard. About 20 years old.
-
@StuartJordan said in A different mindset:
I've always had a passion for working in IT and I feel my love is changing towards how things are changing, especially with Microsoft. It's not azure or cloud services that I feel unhappy with, it's windows itself. I don't even like using it, I just find a lot of things about it annoying, even the amount of times I want to leave an application for it to be closed down, after an update that happend at 3am or trying to scroll that shitty start menu...in the past when vista or Windows Me were launched we was able to stay on the previous OS and Microsoft soon launched a better replacement causing us to eventually move on. With windows as a service, it's all pushed to how Microsoft wants you to use your computer now. Even In a previous thread it was mentioned in regards to pushing users to use their online outlook account, this no doubt will eventually be forced.
The last couple of years I've been focusing more with Linux based distributions, mainly Ubuntu server edition and Cent OS. I feel I'm more happy with working with Linux based systems now, putting effort into using bash has actually been more enjoyable, once again I couldn't stand powershell. I'm now even thinking changing my main desktop to a Linux based distribution.
I've worked with computers since I was 16, I'm now approaching 38, starting from a break fix environment, I just feel the last couple of years I've lost some enjoyment working within IT, has anyone else experienced this feeling?
Yeah I think a lot of us have gone through this. Windows is often frustrating. While it does mostly work, and probably ideal for a certain subset of users, it isn't enjoyable to use. I have done the same as you. I have moved to Linux workstations. I use Opensuse and Fedora daily. Those are on my laptops and Fedora on my cloud servers. So its not just you.
-
@jmoore I just got to the point I didn't want to touch my computer anymore. I have suffered some health issues that I thought might of affected my interest but, I don't think it was just that. Linux is just working how I would expect an OS to work and has give me a bit more interest again. Even BASH command line makes more sense.
The windows team have halved asked trying to remove the control panel and still not changed all the way over to the new settings screen yet, more clicks are now needed to change the network adaptor..I could just go on how unproductive it is. No mater how much you try and snooze on an update it will eventually restart, and I like leaving certain screens open, like my cameras for example. Anyway I won't keep ranting about that..I've been running Linux based servers now for a while, I'm just glad I put the effort into learning a while back. It's now my main desktop -
@scottalanmiller said in A different mindset:
@StuartJordan said in A different mindset:
I've worked with computers since I was 16, I'm now approaching 38, starting from a break fix environment, I just feel the last couple of years I've lost some enjoyment working within IT, has anyone else experienced this feeling?
I've definitely felt Windows in a continuous decline since 1999 with the late released of NT 4. NT 4 was an absolute joy to work with and really felt like MS knew what they were doing and cared. Windows 2000 changed all that and Windows got slow, flaky and felt... amateur. It got harder to use, and less powerful, and less stable. Sometimes they get things right, but overall so much of their product line has just felt like it has been in continuous decline for a long time.
I'm lucky, in a way, I started on UNIX and was a UNIX guy for years before I ever touched Windows for the first time. So Windows has never felt like my native environment, not even in the 3.1 or NT4 eras, it was always a "quirky, amateur alternative" to the "serious, standard" UNIX stuff that was older and used more in business. Windows always seemed like it was for end users and really small shops and never for "real business". Obviously MS pushed Windows into serious places over the years, but that came later. As someone that's been around for forever, I've seen Windows go from a novel idea, to it rising to being a serious contender, to becoming an absolute joke. It feels like it will likely just fade away pretty quickly. It is amazing how quickly NT4 popped up out of nowhere, squished Novell who had been the SMB leader before them, and how quickly it appears it is going to fade away.
I've rarely had Windows as a main driver in all that time. I didn't start using Windows in any real sense until 1995 and by 1997 was back to UNIX. I've had Windows focused jobs, and I have the MCSE+I, but NTG only used Windows exclusively for about 18 months in the early days, and only because it was our development platform. Our internal servers have been Linux since day one. Our desktops have nearly always been Linux.
In my professional life, once in a while I'd be put into a place that pushed Windows on us. But from the oil company to Wall St. to the K12 private school to NTG to IBM all of my major jobs were Linux as my daily driver. The non-profit I worked at was Mac (eww, so awful.) I've certainly used Windows a lot, and while NTG is Linux internally exclusively, the majority of what we support is Windows so I touch it so much every day. And all day long it amazing me that anyone, ever uses Windows by choice. It's not "bad", it's just... so unproductive. Everything is flaky and slow and just... sloppy.
So I'm lucky, I managed to start in the industry before Windows existed, got to enjoy it at its peak, and now that it is rapidly in decline I honestly barely notice. It feels like it is going out with a whimper. I would be pretty unhappy if I was tasked with working on Windows day in and day out, though. I would definitely find my career a lot less rewarding.
I feel like Novell was a better product than Windows at this time. I worked at a small IT shop that provided support for all kinds of things and places that were all Windows just had problems all the time. This was in the 97-2000 period.
-
@scottalanmiller said in A different mindset:
@StuartJordan said in A different mindset:
I feel quite happy that I have saw a lot of history of how hardware and software has developed to this day, and you have seen more then I have. Like people today won't know what a ps/2 mouse is or a serial based mouse lol.
I still end up with those from time to time!
I just replaced some last week.
-
@StuartJordan said in A different mindset:
@jmoore I just got to the point I didn't want to touch my computer anymore. I have suffered some health issues that I thought might of affected my interest but, I don't think it was just that. Linux is just working how I would expect an OS to work and has give me a bit more interest again. Even BASH command line makes more sense.
The windows team have halved asked trying to remove the control panel and still not changed all the way over to the new settings screen yet, more clicks are now needed to change the network adaptor..I could just go on how unproductive it is. No mater how much you try and snooze on an update it will eventually restart, and I like leaving certain screens open, like my cameras for example. Anyway I won't keep ranting about that..I've been running Linux based servers now for a while, I'm just glad I put the effort into learning a while back. It's now my main desktopTo me, Linux is just more fun. I also enjoy learning different flavors too.
-
@jmoore said in A different mindset:
@StuartJordan said in A different mindset:
@jmoore I just got to the point I didn't want to touch my computer anymore. I have suffered some health issues that I thought might of affected my interest but, I don't think it was just that. Linux is just working how I would expect an OS to work and has give me a bit more interest again. Even BASH command line makes more sense.
The windows team have halved asked trying to remove the control panel and still not changed all the way over to the new settings screen yet, more clicks are now needed to change the network adaptor..I could just go on how unproductive it is. No mater how much you try and snooze on an update it will eventually restart, and I like leaving certain screens open, like my cameras for example. Anyway I won't keep ranting about that..I've been running Linux based servers now for a while, I'm just glad I put the effort into learning a while back. It's now my main desktopTo me, Linux is just more fun. I also enjoy learning different flavors too.
Completely agree, so much customisation you can do as well.
-
@scottalanmiller said in A different mindset:
@StuartJordan said in A different mindset:
in the past when vista or Windows Me were launched we was able to stay on the previous OS and Microsoft soon launched a better replacement causing us to eventually move on.
That's not actually quite true. A few things about that statement...
- Windows ME was part of the DOS/Windows family, not part of the Windows NT family that you are discussing. Windows ME was the successor to Windows 98 SE, not to Windows 2000. Windows ME was garbage, but never had a replacement. Windows 98 users were told no further release of DOS was going to happen, but so many people demanded one that ME was created to punish them, and punish them it did. But it was never replaced, it just died.
- The notion that some releases, like 2000 and Vista and 8 were crap and you quickly got something fixed is really a myth. None of those were actually that bad, all of them were just big changes that people didn't like to swallow. Their replacements (XP, 7, and 8.1) were all better, yes, but only in the normal incremental way that you would expect. If you go back and look at the originals now in a direct time line, the only real problems with them, much like Office 2007 with the Ribbon, is that they presented new interfaces and people hate change. Microsoft didn't "fix" problems for the next releases, it was the end users having accepted the changes getting the same thing release "again" and feeling better about it the second time around that gives that weird impression. If you go back and use Vista today, honestly, it's almost identical to 7. They aren't really different things. And nearly all the problems with 8 are the same in 10 still. Nothing was ever addressed for real.
There has never been a good reason to avoid the latest Windows release. Avoiding Windows entirely? Yes, always an argument available for that. But once you were on Windows, if you skipped even the worst releases, you were simply not keeping up and not getting the latest features and having to make bigger jumps later.
Which version was it that MS replaced the network stack with their own and it was utterly horrible? was that Vista RTM? and fixed by Vista SP1?
I know I stayed on Vista SP1 for close to a year after Windows 7 came out, not because I hated Windows 7, I had it on other devices and it was fine (good even), but really more to prove there wasn't anything really wrong with Vista SP1.
-
@Dashrender said in A different mindset:
@scottalanmiller said in A different mindset:
@StuartJordan said in A different mindset:
in the past when vista or Windows Me were launched we was able to stay on the previous OS and Microsoft soon launched a better replacement causing us to eventually move on.
That's not actually quite true. A few things about that statement...
- Windows ME was part of the DOS/Windows family, not part of the Windows NT family that you are discussing. Windows ME was the successor to Windows 98 SE, not to Windows 2000. Windows ME was garbage, but never had a replacement. Windows 98 users were told no further release of DOS was going to happen, but so many people demanded one that ME was created to punish them, and punish them it did. But it was never replaced, it just died.
- The notion that some releases, like 2000 and Vista and 8 were crap and you quickly got something fixed is really a myth. None of those were actually that bad, all of them were just big changes that people didn't like to swallow. Their replacements (XP, 7, and 8.1) were all better, yes, but only in the normal incremental way that you would expect. If you go back and look at the originals now in a direct time line, the only real problems with them, much like Office 2007 with the Ribbon, is that they presented new interfaces and people hate change. Microsoft didn't "fix" problems for the next releases, it was the end users having accepted the changes getting the same thing release "again" and feeling better about it the second time around that gives that weird impression. If you go back and use Vista today, honestly, it's almost identical to 7. They aren't really different things. And nearly all the problems with 8 are the same in 10 still. Nothing was ever addressed for real.
There has never been a good reason to avoid the latest Windows release. Avoiding Windows entirely? Yes, always an argument available for that. But once you were on Windows, if you skipped even the worst releases, you were simply not keeping up and not getting the latest features and having to make bigger jumps later.
Which version was it that MS replaced the network stack with their own and it was utterly horrible? was that Vista RTM? and fixed by Vista SP1?
I know I stayed on Vista SP1 for close to a year after Windows 7 came out, not because I hated Windows 7, I had it on other devices and it was fine (good even), but really more to prove there wasn't anything really wrong with Vista SP1.
Yeah Vista had hardware compatibility issues at release also. But again, I had clients on Vista Business for years with no issues
-
@jmoore said in A different mindset:
I feel like Novell was a better product than Windows at this time. I worked at a small IT shop that provided support for all kinds of things and places that were all Windows just had problems all the time. This was in the 97-2000 period.
Well, it was way, way older and more mature. And it was focused on a single function, or really tight set of functions. It wasn't a desktop, it was easier for them to make it do what it did.
I think within its limitations, it was better. But Windows NT was just more flexible. Eventually, the unnecessary difficulty and complexity and limitations of Novell Netware just lost out to the ease or use and generally flexibility of Windows.
-
@jmoore said in A different mindset:
While it does mostly work, and probably ideal for a certain subset of users,
A very, very tiny subset of probably contrived users. Meaning... it's ideal only because of people making the necessary products to only run on it. The OS itself, as a platform, likely never being ideal.
-
@scottalanmiller said in A different mindset:
@jmoore said in A different mindset:
I feel like Novell was a better product than Windows at this time. I worked at a small IT shop that provided support for all kinds of things and places that were all Windows just had problems all the time. This was in the 97-2000 period.
Well, it was way, way older and more mature. And it was focused on a single function, or really tight set of functions. It wasn't a desktop, it was easier for them to make it do what it did.
I think within its limitations, it was better. But Windows NT was just more flexible. Eventually, the unnecessary difficulty and complexity and limitations of Novell Netware just lost out to the ease or use and generally flexibility of Windows.
Not to mention the draconian licensing. While MS legally required you to have licensing, they almost never enforced it (terminal services was a major exception). But Novell - damn, you couldn't do jack shit if you didn't have a license. Setting up a demo environment was difficult if not impossible.
-
A user actually asked me today if we had dual-booted systems from the brand new Apple she was setup on.
Besides not asking the user their preference (which generally we do) this user said she'd get used to it and just work with Apple.
The setup and maintenance is easier as far as I'm concerned since I can send two commands to a mac and everything gets updated.
On Windows with a domain I need either a third party tool like PDQ Deploy or to use the DC to send package updates (or manually).
Windows definitely feels like it's falling behind, even with solutions like Chocolatey.
-
@DustinB3403 said in A different mindset:
A user actually asked me today if we had dual-booted systems from the brand new Apple she was setup on.
Besides not asking the user their preference (which generally we do) this user said she'd get used to it and just work with Apple.
The setup and maintenance is easier as far as I'm concerned since I can send two commands to a mac and everything gets updated.
How do you do that for say - Citrix on Mac?
-
@Dashrender say what? How would you dual boot?
-
No, how do you make a Mac update Citrix without a third party tool?