Got one word for you...

Interns

There are so many people trying to get into this field, you should be
able to hire a couple for a nominal fee to gain experience.  Granted you
could create twice as much work, but the payoffs could be extra time
off, and being able to do things you rather do then have to do.

TM

-----Original Message-----
From: Garyphold [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 24, 2006 10:43 AM
To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT: speaking of AD books...

Rocky,

I feel your pain.  Same here.  No time to write now, but will say this.
I
spent a GREAT deal of my time in the last 6 years as an IT Mgr
(pronounced
network admin / cook and bottle washer / yadda...) making company mgmt
and
owners understand that IT is like electricity, and not like a new
molding
oven or a building addition.  It is lifeblood that needs to be there
24/7
and if you don't continually pump money into it, it goes away.  And the
company can't function w/o it.  

That said, they still have other more sexy budgetary issues that wield
more
of the glamour factor than IT.  But they've been through this many
times:
hearing me tell them something emphatically, do nothing about it, have
something bad happen, ask my why, and have me tell them I told you so
before
and you told me to shut the h--- up and sit down.  Having gone thru this
PRECARIOUS scenerio a number of times, they still hear what they want to
hear, but they at least wince a little when they give me the brush off
when
I ask for something that costs money - because they know I don't make
this
stuff up and they know that it will be back to visit them.

Bottom line - Mgmt needs to take ownership of the results of their
business
decisions.  Tall order.  But necessary to some degree for an IT Mgr to
maintain their sanity.

Warning:  YMMV - Not recommended for everyone - May be hazardous to job
status.

Couldn't help the $.02,
Gary

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Rocky Habeeb
Sent: Tuesday, January 24, 2006 9:56 AM
To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT: speaking of AD books...


As always, thanks joe for responding to my query which was only half
heartededly posed.  The other half was deadly serious.  To be honest, I
think that many of the experts who post on this group have lost site of
what
it's like to work in a small shop.  WE DO EVERYTHING THAT NEEDS TO BE
DONE
FROM SOUP TO NUTS.  We unload FedEx trucks and then go install Oracle
9i. We
build PCs from scratch and then go backup servers over a VPN using DAT
drives (because we cannot get an integrated solution to do it).  How do
you
automate things like the following:

[1] Spending 30 minutes cleaning with alcohol and swabs the fuser roll
of an
HP 8100 printer so it prints without streaks? [2] Troubleshoot an HP
Kayak
XU800 that for months worked fine and now reboots at will? [3] Perform
file
maintenance on 8 major servers comprising 1 TB because Users will not
clean
off data and drives are maxxed? [4] Figure out why an Executive VP's
Eudora
email is consistently crashing? [5] Install and configure client
supplied
custom software on 10 new PCs for work with a high profile client? (Did
I
mention that some PCs are NT, some W2K and some XP and the software will
only work on  ... well ... guess which ones?  We have to figure it out)
[1]
[6] Download patches for surveying program software that has to be
installed
on laptops that are in the field (ie: unaccessible) and waiting updates
because TOPCON GPS Surveying instruments will not work until they see
the
patch? [7] Determine why a quarter million dollar Citrix farm routinely
crashes ESRI arcGIS 9.0 taking with it the entire production of 20 Users
and
corrupting an Oracle database as a bonus? [8] Remotely trying to
troubleshoot why a color printer in a remote site all of a sudden won't
print? [9] Trying to figure out why, all of a sudden, an Adaptec snap
server
(running Linux under windows) now decides no one has permission to read
it?
[10] Oh! The custom Timesheet application that Accounting put in place
now,
all of a sudden, has lost all of the timesheets for this week.  Where
did
they go?

Fact is, I could go on like this for 10 more pages and not repeat a
single
item above,  I swear that is not an exaggeration.  Fact is, in the past
6
years, I have not come to work one single day and not faced a brand new
problem that no one has ever seen before.  No lie!  You can't automate
my
life.  You can't build scripts to do virtually any of this.  Yes you
could
build scripts to do some, but it would not make a difference in the
number
of hours per week I work.  Yes I could choose to work 40 hours per week
and
no one tells me to work 50, 60 or 70.  But the work I don't get done
today
will be here tomorrow.

I should be fixing problems right now, but I watch this list like a hawk
because I know, something I read from one of the masters is going to
save my
life (read a__) some day and if I fail to see it then, shame on me.
Well,
your next question is going to be "How do you have time to write all
this if
you're so busy?"  I take the time, just like you do.  You can't tell me
that
you are less busy than me.    I'm pretty sure you're not, but just
answer me
this.  When you were in ops, did you have the breadth of problems that I
describe above?  If so, then sign me:

YMYMYM because you "ARE" the master.  If so, really help me out.  Tell
me
how to automate the above ten items.  Everything you and the others say
is
true, but unless you're living in my world, these solutions don't help
me.

But I still love you, ;-)

[1] "YES, I know standardize."  I would if I had the money, but 50% of
the
capital spending budget is going to buy a new airplane this year.
Sorry, I
can't "show you the money."

RH

___________________________________________

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of joe
Sent: Monday, January 23, 2006 9:03 PM
To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT: speaking of AD books...


1. Purchase a copy of joe's book for self and everyone at work and
everyone
you know.


To be serious though, in your shoes, my choice would be to work 70-80
hours
a week and spend the extra 10-20 hours for a while trying to identify
anything that could be automated or handled in some other safe way that
requires less of my time and then work to get that done. Try to find
some
big hitters that if you get cleared out of the way gives you more time
to
find more things to automate to get out of the way. If you save say 2
minutes on something you do 20 times a day that is still 40 minutes
saved.
Also consider that when you automate things, they tend to be done in a
more
consistent manner so you run into less issues due to small mistakes in
consistency that cause investigation time. The last ops position that I
started back in 2001 when I did this I actually ended up working closer
to
probably 100 or more hours a week handling manually requests and issues
globally as I was the only one on the brand new team that had any
understanding on how to really fix things that were broken and things at
that point were very broken. That went on for months but slowly adding
the
appropriate scripts the work load reduced as things took minutes instead
of
tens of minutes or seconds instead of minutes and the other guys were
able
to run the scripts to do things and were spinning up on how everything
worked.

If you do nothing manually that is recurring I would be extremely
surprised.
I haven't seen an ops job yet that didn't have a lot of time spent doing
the
same things over and over again. If however, that is the case, then the
efficiencies have to be gained in producing tools to help you
troubleshoot
and make that go quicker. There is always something that can be done to
make
a group faster, better, and more efficient. The thing is to find it and
figure out what it takes to get better and then do it. It might be the
solution is buy something, but that usually doesn't go over well so keep
in
mind anything you can buy you can probably cobble together yourself if
you
need it bad enough and it will help you.

It falls back to something I have said multiple times on list and other
places. If you are too busy chopping down the trees to sharpen the axe
you
will just get further and further behind as your axe dulls. In every IT
ops
based job I have had, it was always a case of too much work and too few
resources. Not once did I get hired into an ops group that had nothing
to do
or a bunch of free time to sit around. I expect that makes sense because
there is no reason to hire someone if there is free time. So the goal is
always to try and figure out how to do things in such a way that it can
be
done better and more efficiently. While you are figuring out how to
automate
you are learning how things work so you become more deadly with your
troubleshooting-fu so when problems crop up outside of the normal
requests
and daily grind you are quicker (hopefully) at solving them.




-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Rocky Habeeb
Sent: Monday, January 23, 2006 10:14 AM
To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT: speaking of AD books...


Dear people,

I would appreciate it it you would prioritize the following for me;

[A] [  ] Work 60 hours a week managing (with only one other person) 250
PCs
in 4 states and 40 Servers. [B] [  ] Live at the only bookmark in my
browser
when at home "www.microsoft.com" looking for solutions, etc. [C] [  ]
Read
joe's (et al) new book. [D] [  ] Studying for my MCSA [E] [  ] Studying
for
my MCP [F] [  ] Studying for my MCSE [G] [  ] Securing my network [H] [
]
Reading the new book joe is going to write on BP's [Yes, please tell me
how
to rebuild a DC remotely from bare metal!!] [I] [  ] Reading Robbie's
book(s)  (note: please sub-prioritize those books) [J] [  ] Balanicing
my
checkbook ( hey .. I have to do something else at home,
right?) [K] [  ] Patching my network [L] [  ] Learn to script [M] [  ]
Watch
College basketball on TV [N] [  ] Read all of Sakari's books [O] [  ]
Read
the AD list archives completely

"Hey, I'm almost serious here."

As Guido would say, "That's enough for today."

RH


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