Video How Will IT Workers' Roles Change in the Next Five Years? (Video) 138
Slashdot: I'm Robin Miller for Slashdot. This is Sarah Lahav, who is in Israel and is the CEO of SysAid, one of the world's many IT service desk operations. We're told it's a good one, but we're not here to talk about competitive service desks, believe it or not, but who's going to need them and how and anything else in IT will change 5, 10 years from now. Because, Sarah, what does moving into the cloud mean to your clients, your customers?
Sarah Lahav: It's a tough question to be honest. I'm thinking most cases, it’s a journey of security in new frontiers. For a lot of years, people are saying cloud is here, we are in the cloud, but here on a daily basis, we see with people making the decision to move to cloud, we’re still struggling with the basic, which is understanding resources, software solutions, even regards to services that they can get. We’re still in, in my understanding, in the basic.
Slashdot: Yeah. And I wonder because here's something somebody said to me – tell me what you think of it – He said the cloud, there is no such thing, there's merely other people's computers.
Sarah Lahav: Simplifying the whole concept of the cloud, it’s true, but coming from a – I used to be an IT person back in the days. And IT people, their main focus is around security, it was much simpler when we used to see the computer and we knew it was behind the firewall.
Slashdot: Yeah.
Sarah Lahav: And we’ve actually not seen it, we don't have even control of the electricity switch. One of the main things that people are afraid is somebody else has the control of that electricity, which is a simple thing, and we don't have plans to recover from somebody else walking around to our service and just shutting the electricity down. I can understand if it’s somebody else's computer, but given the face of confidence in giving the major thing in IT to somebody else for me it’s more than that.
Slashdot: What can the corporate IT user, your customer, or the person on their own, what can they do to prepare for changes in the next 5 or 10 years?
Sarah Lahav: That's a big question that we deal around the industry a lot. And well divided. People say that the IT person will not exist because everything will go to the cloud. And the other half claims that people from the IT will have new skills. It wouldn’t be the same IT person as we know him now, there will be focus more on firewalls than on fixing computers and stuff like that. I do think that there is a certain challenge, okay, and I accept that and I attended the Gartner event that spoke the same kind of scenario on the HSBC events, so probably heard about it there.
And I think that – this is in my opinion, it would sound a little bit not logical but DevOps and speed are everything. I understand you cannot know everything – you know databases and everything there, probably that you could know. But once you see a problem, the faster you’d get to it – the faster you have your team fix it or apply a change or do something, the better. The only thing you need to change in my opinion is that you would be able to... the minute you understand something you say, “Let's go!” – a speed approach. To fix it really, really quickly, that will be the key.
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It's been this way for almost 20 years. In grad school, my operating system's class professor used to say there hasn't been any true development since 1955 (virtual memory), everything else is either has been refinement and/or marketing. I've thought for a while now that once you know a sufficient amount about a sufficient amount of subjects, it all starts to look very similar.
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Duh I've seen that kind of comment years ago
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New jobs for US IT workers as greeters for Walmart. "Yes, what you are looking for is in Aisle 32."
That depends (Score:3)
If (H1B == true) then great
else bad
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#DEFINE IT_Worker "underpaid genius"
void main{
if (occupation==IT_Manager){
}
else{
}
return goFuckYourself
}
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Can't find that #DEFINE on my twitter
IT workers and the cloud (Score:2)
There are many definitions of "the cloud". My personal favorites:
cloud = server(s) managed by someone other than you in another location
Other than some common generic services you still have to engineer solutions to fit your business needs. Anything you want to have you have to specify and pay for. The cloud does not magically/automatically provide backup/fail-over. You have to set these up and pay extra for them.
IT can succeed or fail in the cloud just the same as it can in your own private data center
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there are multiple definitions of IT Worker... be it sysadmins or desktop support or middleware admins, email admins, network admins etc.
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I think the definition of "the cloud" that has emerged is "servers managed by someone other than you, managed to the extent that you are not aware of or concerned with the actual hardware."
So the difference between having someone host your VM and having your VM hosted in "the cloud" is essentially just, "the way in which it's hosted makes it so I don't know, and it doesn't matter, which hardware it's running on." It's about the level of abstraction of management. If I have a couple of virtual hosts in my
So, The Cloud == Outsourced, right? (Score:2)
So then, having a company say their stuff "is in The Cloud", really means they Outsourced it, right?
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And even those generic services will still need someone to provide them. Whether that person is directly employed by your company or is an employee of the "cloud" company you're contracting with.
Most definitely. Particularly when there is a problem with your company's Internet link and everything "in the cloud" is unavailable.
Or
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Here's a job that's IT-centered but doesn't give a fuck about cloud or non-cloud: Data analysis.
Big Data (buzzword, yeah I hate that too) absolutely requires highly technical IT people who "get" (understand) data. Management and MBAs are just eyeballing some graphs but when deep dive analysis comes on, they're as lost as Hansel and Gretel in episode two of "let's take a walk in the park, kids".
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The Cloud is great. It allows regular people to describe a service without ever having to understand it and without ever being expected to define it. Managers love it, it's less expensive and you certainly couldn't be expected to be accountable for what happens in the Cloud. That's what in the Cloud means right? It's a service over which you need no knowledge or control.
Then again you can be obtuse and call Cloud a Measured service with On-demand self-service, Broad network access, Resource pooling and Rapi
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I am a Cloud Architect.
People ask me what Cloud is/means.
"In a nutshell, the Cloud means You Don't Own It."
If you outsource to IBM (and other physical plant providers as well) in a "traditional" datacenter, you the client actually own the hardware legally (in most cases). If you want, you can come lift and shift it out of the datacenter. In a cloud environment, you don't own it. Potentially not even the data you have stored in the cloud, as some people have found out.
During my long 25 years as a Sysadmin, t
Opinion from a former help desk person turned PHB? (Score:1)
Dredging deep here, Dice. But I guess she's female, so it's perfectly in keeping with your new tradition of a Friday fedora-tip to the SJW menace.
SJW Conspiracy (Score:2)
I don't think he smokes crack, I think he's a SJW injecting the SJW acronym as often as possible in SJW off-topic comments so SJW becomes a cliche.
More support roles (Score:1)
Most software development is moving to cloud-centric. Look to see less application development and more add-o/plug-in roles. The days of inhouse apps are dwindling as pressure is being put on companies to run leaner. There will always be support roles, hardware issues to address and servers or networks to maintain though diminished. "Remember the good ole nineteen eighties" ELO.
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You mean Kannad, Telugu, Urdu, Tamil, Marathi, Hindi.
Hindi and English are the official languages but in cities like Bangalore, Hyderabad and Mumbai, Hindi actually doesn't come on top.
Already seeing it (Score:3)
The level of complexity in an IT worker's job has dramatically changed easily in the last 10 if not the last 5 years).
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The level of complexity in an IT worker's job has dramatically changed easily in the last 10 if not the last 5 years).
Huh? Things are getting much simpler. Today you can code to web standards instead of having browser dependent code. Today you can run 20 servers in one box. Today you can safely assume that your clients have decent bandwidth. Less complexity on your job means that today you are getting a lot more done.
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>> Today you can code to web standards instead of having browser dependent code. Today you can safely assume that your clients have decent bandwidth.
Are you from the future? Because that's not the truth in 2015...
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>> Today you can code to web standards instead of having browser dependent code. Today you can safely assume that your clients have decent bandwidth.
Are you from the future? Because that's not the truth in 2015...
That's pretty funny. Do you surf amazon.com? Or newegg.com? Or target.com? Or any other retail web site? Lots and lots of images on each page. Many many megabytes. They assume you have good bandwidth. They sure aren't losing customers because they require good bandwidth.
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Things are getting much simpler.
Not from where I'm sitting. Instead, the complexity goes up every year as they keep trying to do more with less. I'm fine with that as means I get paid more since they still need someone who understands how it all works.
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Not from where I'm sitting. Instead, the complexity goes up every year as they keep trying to do more with less. I'm fine with that as means I get paid more since they still need someone who understands how it all works.
well then it IS simpler because you are getting more work done with the same amount of effort.
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if the same amount of work gets you more results, then the things you are doing are simpler, because you are doing more of them with the same effort.
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working in the fields burns you out
playing football burns you out
this feature is not unique to the IT world
the smart ones figure out how to climb out of their pits
the smart ones figure out how to climb out (Score:3)
I keep looking for greener grass. It's hard find US$100+k/year jobs that are not in the pit.
For those who've climbed out, what was the greener grass that you found and now live in?
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If you have customers, you have to code to whatever craptastic version of Internet Explorer or Firefox they have locked themselves into.
Really? You "have" to? No, you don't. You put up a message and you tell your customers to upgrade their browser. Compromising your security to deal with customers who refuse to upgrade is not in anyone's best interest.
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The web is not all of IT.
There are backend/backoffice functions that keep getting more and more complex. SAP comes to mind, and while Hadoop and it's relatives are cool, they are more complex to deploy than a single big Data Warehouse.
Getting all the moving pieces to play nice is a full time job, at least for me. I have found that the more power you get the more the apps need it. It is a continual arms race of capacity and complexity against demand and utility.
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Lol not in my world I can't. T1s still rule with my customers.
10 years ago many of your customers probably had dialup
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Yes, much more complex code though
how is it more complex to have one set of browser code instead of three or four?
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Except it isn't one set of browser code. You still have to account for platform differences. If you aren't aware of this, I really doubt that you are in this part of the business.
Plus it's not just the new shiny shiny.
You have to deal with everyone's past mistakes. This is especially true in non-consumer settings. There's probably even a lot of consumers stuck on older versions due to various motivations to not upgrade.
Then there are your mobile devices (with their own quirks and way of doing things) and mo
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Except it isn't one set of browser code. You still have to account for platform differences. If you aren't aware of this, I really doubt that you are in this part of the business.
I am aware of this, the difference now is that the differences between the platforms are bugs instead of outright feature differences. Different browsers have different bugs but at least today they are all reading from the same specifications. Your client code doesn't need to be recoded from scratch for each browser. Today you just have to be aware of the platform specific bugs and work around them
Self-inflicted (Score:2)
Most of it is self-inflicted. In fact, most of it is eagerly, self-congratulatorily self-inflicted.
Not much (Score:2)
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Sure, there's the World Wide Web, but before that we had FTP, Gopher, Telnet, and LANs.
None of those old things were frameworks for client/server application development. You could hire a team to write a networked app in C or C++ and it took months and months. With modern web tools you can get an application up and running in a few minutes.
Cloud storage isn't really any different than network home drives. The tech will change (cheaper, faster, slightly easier for the end user), but at the end of the day, you're still installing software, answering end-user questions, adding servers to the network, maybe repairing hardware, etc.
Um, if you are doing things in the cloud, you're not adding servers to your network and you're not repairing hardware.
Re: Not much (Score:2)
Are there cloud tools that write your business logic for you? That's the time consuming part, not the scaffolding. A few minutes might give you a bare bones website but it won't build your complex website and database or automatically connect to all the other systems it might need.
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Are there cloud tools that write your business logic for you? That's the time consuming part, not the scaffolding.
yes, there are. if you have a warehouse full of parts or a doctor's office or an online store, there are plenty of tools available that you can use.
A few minutes might give you a bare bones website
we are talking about full integrated application suites here, not textbook examples. If you look in your industry you will probably find 10 providers that have canned applications that they are selling to your competitors. Do you have a grocery warehouse? A hospital? Do you rent cars? What about an apartment complex? I could go on and on... If you need sof
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we are talking about full integrated application suites here, not textbook examples. If you look in your industry you will probably find 10 providers that have canned applications that they are selling to your competitors. Do you have a grocery warehouse? A hospital? Do you rent cars? What about an apartment complex? I could go on and on... If you need software for one of these applications, you have no business rolling your own. You go out and get a full-on software suite that takes care of it all. You can either buy it outright or you can pay for it as a service, your choice.
And the first thing the users will tell you is "That's great! But can you make it do this one simple thing?"
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And the first thing the users will tell you is "That's great! But can you make it do this one simple thing?"
Do you even work in the IT field? This is what we call a "revenue opportunity". If they really want it, they will pay you for it.
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And the first thing the users will tell you is "That's great! But can you make it do this one simple thing?"
Do you even work in the IT field? This is what we call a "revenue opportunity". If they really want it, they will pay you for it.
I can tell that you don't, if you think that people want to pay for anything in IT. After all, there's millions of people in Southeast Asia who'd be glad to do the job. For wages that would starve anyone in the First World.
Oh yes, and it has to be delivered in 3 days. Because All Yo Have To Do Is...
Re: Not much (Score:2)
Yeah we have plenty of them. We also have unique requirements too and old systems that won't go away. I've worked in IT for 20 years and managers have always been buying packages that then need to be heavily customised because they believed the salesman. Every business is different and generic systems aren't always the answer.
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Very few shops of any size have all of their resources in the cloud.
straw man alert, nobody says that
you put your forward facing web services in the cloud and keep the data secure in your own data center
My own experience has been... (Score:3)
...that the company will buy IT as a service from the most cost-effective supplier, most current IT personnel will be laid off (a few will be repurposed), and then users will discover shortly after cutover that calling the (now overseas) helpdesk has suddenly become an exercise in frustration, because of the language barrier and because the helpdesk person often knows less about computers and about the environment than the customer, because the business model dictates that you can pull people off the street, hand them a stack of procedures, and they become IT personnel. (This works as well as you imagine.)
Management and team leaders will beg the remaining IT management not to make their users call the helpdesk, in vain.
Due to lack of effective IT services and the necessity to actually get work done, little pools of IT start to pop up around the company. It starts as a file share on someone's PC, and then an off-the-books PC becoming a dedicated resource (there's a rogue EXSi server not three feet from me) and developers start to remember old admin and dba skills. After awhile, the company IT infrastructure is still used for no-brainer stuff like mail and large storage appliances and relatively static work like billing is still done on big, enterprise-class machines, but more and more anything that needs to be flexible, or resources that need to respond rapidly to user needs, are done surreptitiously, under the table, with the funds being disguised as other thing.
Then, when development itself is outsourced, it's left to the "development managers" and "offshore interface personnel" to maintain the still-used local resources, plus, usually, additional personnel to try to find some use for the code produced by those offshore resources, who have no real context of what the code is being used for.
(Parenthetically, the problem is not confined to IT. A company of which I have experience who has outsourced their accounting, still doesn't realize that after three years the offshore accountants still don't know the difference between California and Canada, and think the transaction must be correct if they don't get an error when they hit "return". The remaining 10% of retained accountants are kept busy correcting mistakes and doing the work over again.)
Anyway, the point being, some IT people don't choose to fade away, they go underground. They find that users can be very thankful of a helpful person who can communicate well and has knowledge of the company and what the user is trying to accomplish. Who isn't following a script but genuinely trying to help, with the expertise to do so. I have a title that sounds like a different job, but I'm still doing admin and customer support. When I'm not at my regular job, I have a side business providing home support for people who are tired of "I am being here for helping you turn it off and back on again".
So yeah, I guess IT has changed.
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...that the company will buy IT as a service from the most cost-effectiveXXXXXXXXX cheapest supplier,
FTFY.
And you forgot about the part where your company shows up on the evening news because all of your most critical data has been leaked to former Soviet-block countries. After a mysterious 6-hour service outage.
But it's "cost effective", right?
For the guys who collected the bonuses and bailed, anyway.
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Yes. I wrote "cheapest" first, and then changed it to the more ...shall we say "businessly correct", "cost-effective".
In our case, it's more likely that the data will be leaked to our competitors. Which raises a different question -- a *lot* of our company confidential data is now going through or being stored on "cloud" services. In some cases, those services are supplying both us and our largest competitors. At what point does it become, um, cost-effective to discretely sell a company's data to a comp
Outsourcing (Score:2)
The company where I work has gone the Outsourcing route for their data centers.
When I started at the Company, ten years ago, Data Center employees were FTEs (Full Time Employees) that worked for the Company.
Then there was a change of CTO, and during that CTOs reign the Company FTE Data Center staff were aggressively and mostly eliminated, then replaced with Outsource IBM service staff. Additionally many IT EDI staff became Outsourced.
Ten years ago, I worked with none (maybe one?) Outsourced IT staffer. Many
I would like to know (Score:1)
How many people have used the "cloud" and then moved away from it.
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How many people have used the "cloud" and then moved away from it.
how do you "move away" from the "cloud"? do you get a different address in cyberspace? do you have to give up on online shopping?
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You bring outsourced services back in house and run your own servers on your own network rather than paying someone else in Timbuktu to do it for you.
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You bring outsourced services back in house and run your own servers on your own network rather than paying someone else in Timbuktu to do it for you.
your joke detector is badly broken
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how do you "move away" from the "cloud"?
I stopped using DropBox (cloud) and started using a file server (local). More storage space and less risk of being compromised by hackers.
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I stopped using DropBox (cloud) and started using a file server (local). More storage space and less risk of being compromised by hackers.
yeah those encrypted backup files magically get more secure when you copy them onto your own computer.
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Much more accessible if your Internet connection goes down for an extended period of time when you really need to get work done.
Depends on which side of the link you are on...
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A video for this?, really? (Score:1)
In the future... (Score:2)
Once we've really gotten to the future, there will be speech to text - or at least editors that know how to type up an interview - so that we don't have to site through video interviews.
A swing back to the glass house, perhaps? (Score:2)
I wonder if we will see a swing from cloud computing back to a central managed system, similar to the mainframe concept (first go around), XStations (second go around), JavaSations (third go around), except using VDI and a remote desktop protocol, where the computer on the desk mainly is there to run remote apps, and instead of the apps being on the cloud, they would be moved back to the central datacenter for security reasons.
I have a feeling we will be seeing some major breaches, perhaps a cloud provider
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a return to having a core data center
Really, you assume that individual companies can roll their own security better? You're dreaming. Look at target, home depot, hannafords, etc.
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It can be done. For every firm that hits the news, there are plenty that thwart attacks, but attacks repelled don't make the news.
Take one large, recent breach as an example. If they had any type of lockout or alerting protection on their Active Directory service accounts, the brute force on their AD accounts would have been stopped in its tracks. In fact, the AD default is a 20 minute lockout every few bad guesses.
Target and others would have the attacks stopped cold by an IDS/IPS. No, these are not ch
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their subnets should be isolated from the Internet for everything but security patches, alarms/traps, and other essential communication.
in other words, leave lots of possible security holes
Take a law firm. Unless there is an exception, their individual partner offices, floor, and entire building is locked at night.
by cutting network access to say, 0700 to 1900
Really? What a convenient reality you have. Most lawyers work 50 to 80 hours a week.
it means that half the attacks mounted against the network would fail.
this is a pretty pathetic way to avoid a network attack, assuming that it won't happen during business hours. it's like saying you don't have to worry about shoplifters because we lock the doors at night.
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In all cases you describe they didn't roll their own security. They outsourced development and surprise surprise.
guess what? you can't outsource responsibility. they are still responsible whether they outsourced the work or not.
you are right, amazon has not been hacked, more companies should take a lesson from them. they don't outsource responsibility, they own it.
Cloud or no cloud, you still need smart people (Score:2)
I've been doing systems work for quite a while, and The Cloud isn't making things easier for IT workers -- it's making them more complex as there are now more moving parts you don't control to consider. Our company is still mainly an on-premises shop because we deploy stuff in areas where The Cloud can't be accessed at a reasonable speed for a reasonable price. But, I would say that virtualization in general has made things a lot more...fluid...than before. What's needed now is more people who know integrat
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the companies will find out after a while that it costs too much to get their data back and rebuild their own capacity on-site.
huh? all they have to do is make their own internal cloud and migrate onto it.
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Sure, but this would be after getting rid of 90% of their IT department, selling the data center, and realizing they have to pay Amazon or Microsoft a not-insignificant sum to move petabytes of data/VMs back out. Data transfer to the cloud is free, transfers out cost a lot of money.
I have been through a couple of offshoring exercises. What usually happens is the company is sold a dream, the reality fails to materialize, and the company needs to just wait out the contract because they no longer have the expe
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Data transfer to the cloud is free, transfers out cost a lot of money.
are you saying there is some sort of premium charge if I run a SQL SELECT query from my own IP address?
LOL! (Score:2)
We asked Sarah Lahav this question. She's founder and CEO of service management and help desk software company SysAid
If you're not asking Gartner Group, I'm not interested - the answers simply won't have as much comedic value. ;)
Completely off topic. . . (Score:1)
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what's an advertisement?
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We don't call them advertisements around here, we like to call them stories; or occasionally slasvertisements.
what's this "we" business?
Since hypothetical situations are news stories... (Score:1)
Business and consumer technologies are usually hidden under SEP field generators. And without us geeks to unplug the AC adapter from your router, or to read the instructions on your screen and click the corresponding icon for you, the vast majority of idiot morons on computers would be fucked. Unless the general public decides that they need to actually understand the tools they use on a daily basis, and educate themselves accordingly, IT work will ALWAYS ex
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What would it be like if (choose occupation here) went on strike?
Don't feel so special, the world falls apart when the garbage men go on strike.
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Asking a consultant group is a bad idea. (Score:1)
They just want to see things as less permanent, which means more easily managed people. In turn, that means people are worse off overall for lack of access to opportunities that go a more conventional route.
Everything will go to the cloud .. (Score:2)
Seriously though, whenever addressing a techie crowd, never use the ' cloud ' word. What people unskilled in the art don't realize is that a virtual machine in 'the cloud' is virtually (sic) the same as a rack mounted PC. You still need someone to install and configure your business systems and no one is going to do that for free, certainly not your cloud provider. As for the effectiveness or ineffectiveness of the firewall, someone else more advanced in the arts once put it better.
Same shit different smell.. (Score:1)
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what's a printer?
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Its what you use to construct firearms, and occasionally table top miniatures.
even more useless than I thought
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Good point. Locals are still going to be necessary.
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Yes. Outsourced IT services is a double edged sword. On the one hand, a botched assignment can provide business possibilities for people who can do a better job. (Or, at very least, communicate better.) On the other hand, the botched work can instead be handed off to already snowed-under local personnel.
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Hm. That sounds like grounds to find a new server team.
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Outsourcing multiplies the problem. (Score:1)
...which will be worse than the local team.
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The botched work is also often blamed on the previous engineer, who may have been presented by policy or resource management or "there's not a business case for it" from doing a more effective, more thorough job.
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the hackers aren't going to try an hack a firewall, they are going to send an email that makes you feel warm and fuzzy to open up that attachment.
if they have any kind of security, they won't be able to download the attachment unless you've hacked their router first