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dogstile posted:Since this was my first real job I wanted to wait it out until six months before looking but i'm just about to hit the five month mark
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 17:45 |
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# ? Apr 27, 2024 09:15 |
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rolleyes posted:Yeah, so it definitely doesn't sound like the standard 3-step process is being followed here and if they've been working there for years then they're definitely protected. Suggest that they lawyer up and get the employment tribunals rolling - that's gotta be unfair dismissal. May be worth contacting these guys for support too? gone soon
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 17:59 |
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Blackberries. I do not loving understand the OS these things use. Am I just an idiot who needs dumb babby mobile OSes like Android and iOS? I have no idea how ti find the settings for anything on a Blackberry, and that's after I get past having to use the tiny little trackball thing. I'm trying to troubleshoot/confirm some contact sync settings and I have no idea what to look for. On either of the other big mobile OSes I would simply go into Settings and find the mail/accounts section, but that doesn't exist on this thing. I just...I don't understand. Boy howdy would I love a job where I never have to touch another BB again.
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 19:38 |
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I doubt you'll have to wait very long for that wish to come true.
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 19:53 |
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Inspector_666 posted:Blackberries. I do not loving understand the OS these things use. Am I just an idiot who needs dumb babby mobile OSes like Android and iOS? I had a BB as a company phone back before the iPhone came out, it was rad. I had to pull some pictures off one the other day and it took me like a half hour to figure out how to use that drat thing again.
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 20:02 |
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Pissed off customer. One of our booking websites sucks balls and our webdevs are clueless. This particular site is buggy in IE and it was suggested he use Firefox (our as the web programmers call it, one of which doesn't even have internet at home, 'Mozilla')pissed customer posted:Subject: web problems/
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 20:04 |
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The golden rule is not to ignore IE, unless, it's versions 8 and prior. To be honest, if they managed to gently caress up a site on IE9..11, then well done.
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 20:10 |
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quote:It was tough enough going from dos to windows
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 20:13 |
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Bob Morales posted:I had a BB as a company phone back before the iPhone came out, it was rad. Once upon a time, even Seinfeld did an episode on the Crackberry. Amazing how it was so pervasive in society only to have completely pissed away its market advantage. Pissing me off: bureaucracy. I received a tag three weeks ago to finish the decommission process for two servers that are powered off and sitting in a rack. I have verified that all traces of the server have been removed (service accounts in AD, computer name in AD, DNS entries, assigned storage returned to the pool, etc) and literally all I have left to do is create a tag for the noc monkies to go in and degauss the disks. But there are two PMs who have been bickering for the last three weeks over which project code to use. I'm talking maybe a half hour worth of work for some data center cj to stick a DBAN disk into two servers and let it run for 30 minutes or whatever. Seriously folks. Let's just charge it to baseline because it's only 30 loving minutes and you've been arguing about it for three weeks.
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 20:14 |
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Is it just me or is barracuda web filter a piece of poo poo?
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 20:45 |
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totalnewbie posted:Is it just me or is barracuda web filter a piece of poo poo? Eh the physical appliances suck; the virtual appliances I like. So long as you keep it sorta up to date I haven't had problems with them.
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 20:48 |
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totalnewbie posted:Is it just me or is barracuda web filter a piece of poo poo? Define piece of poo poo? Most of these webfilter appliances are just managed Linux boxes running Squid and some form of squid-guard like database of bad sites with some custom squid reporting. You're paying for their customization, updates, fancy reporting and the ease of not rolling your own.
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 20:51 |
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It loves to throw out false positives for no apparent reason like nobody's business. Maybe it is IT, maybe it is me, I don't know. Here's something else: is Outlook/Exchange (2010, I'm pretty sure) really bad about keeping credentials, or is it just poorly set up? If our laptops switch APs, Outlook will lose credentials and demand the password again. Even after entering the correct password, it continually re-prompts for the password. This may or may not lead to the account being locked, sometimes due to trying other passwords because obviously the one I just entered wasn't right (even if it was). Sharepoint also does the same thing. Frankly, this is stupid behavior that, to me, is a sign of a terribly configured network. I also suspect it's just a badly configured network because we're "out of IP addresses" (so please turn off wireless on your cell phones). totalnewbie fucked around with this message at 21:04 on Feb 11, 2014 |
# ? Feb 11, 2014 20:57 |
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totalnewbie posted:It loves to throw out false positives for no apparent reason like nobody's business. Maybe it is IT, maybe it is me, I don't know. Only really gotten that when it falls out of date. What kinda sites?
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 21:03 |
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Well Spotify is unblocked, but for a while one of the apps (Filtr) was a "parked site". At least, the html site was. The app itself still doesn't work in Spotify, probably because it calls some other URL from the app itself, which is still blocked. Then images hosted on one of Gawker's image servers (kinja or kinja-imgs or something) was blocked as... I don't even remember what. And of course today, the site for an apartment building I was looking at (which doesn't serve ads) was blocked for "Spyware" even though I had visited it a couple weeks before. No big deals, but just weird random sites that are randomly blocked for no apparent reason.
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 21:11 |
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totalnewbie posted:It loves to throw out false positives for no apparent reason like nobody's business. Maybe it is IT, maybe it is me, I don't know. Your wifi hands out a new DHCP lease every time you change AP's, but doesn't scavange the old one, depleting the DHCP pool. Reduce the lease time to something really short, like 8 hours, or fix your wifi to enable handoff's correctly. Outlook gets pretty dumb. When it prompts for a password, hit 'other user' and enter your username as <domain>\<username> and retype your password. Outlook uses your email as a login UPN, but unless your domain is specifically configured for this, it won't work.
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 21:23 |
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Okay so gently caress outlook. But still, with 200 people in our office, I don't see how we run out of addresses in the DHCP pool. The lease is set for 3 days. And the antivirus (Vipre) is set up to make a scan at 1 PM every weekday. On Thurdays, it performs a "Deep scan" which took 3 hours, according to the logs. But I guess since they're laptops, there's maybe not a better time, since people often take them home and leave them off.
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 21:29 |
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totalnewbie posted:But still, with 200 people in our office, I don't see how we run out of addresses in the DHCP pool. The lease is set for 3 days.
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 21:34 |
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EoRaptor posted:Your wifi hands out a new DHCP lease every time you change AP's, but doesn't scavange the old one, depleting the DHCP pool. Reduce the lease time to something really short, like 8 hours, or fix your wifi to enable handoff's correctly. The DHCP server should be issuing the same IP again as the client already has an active lease, regardless of the fact that they've roamed onto a new AP. Unless each AP has its own subnet
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 21:35 |
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dogstile posted:Also, desk time is rigid as hell, if they see me with my phone on the desk they tell me to put it away and if i'm a minute or two late signing onto the phones then they actually dock it off my annual leave, meaning that yes, I had 7 hours 58 minutes worth of leave I could take and they expected me to come in for the two minutes. I wasn't allowed a full day off. This poo poo is depressing. I like the people here, but the boss and the rooms manager are just stressful as hell. holy poo poo
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 21:40 |
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dogstile posted:if i'm a minute or two late signing onto the phones then they actually dock it off my annual leave, meaning that yes, I had 7 hours 58 minutes worth of leave I could take and they expected me to come in for the two minutes. I wasn't allowed a full day off. Re-read that quote lol, and I don't think that they they can stop you if you demand two minutes unpaid leave.
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 21:52 |
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There is no way that being petty about 2 minutes of time actually saves them any money.
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 21:53 |
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totalnewbie posted:But still, with 200 people in our office, I don't see how we run out of addresses in the DHCP pool. The lease is set for 3 days. What's your subnet? If you're on a /24 and you have 200 people, just their work computers alone are using up the majority of the address pool, and I assume they all have a phone on top of that. Hopefully servers/printers are on a different network.
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 21:53 |
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dogstile posted:Also, desk time is rigid as hell, if they see me with my phone on the desk they tell me to put it away and if i'm a minute or two late signing onto the phones then they actually dock it off my annual leave, meaning that yes, I had 7 hours 58 minutes worth of leave I could take and they expected me to come in for the two minutes. I wasn't allowed a full day off.
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 21:59 |
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totalnewbie posted:It loves to throw out false positives for no apparent reason like nobody's business. Maybe it is IT, maybe it is me, I don't know. One thing I noticed when I upgraded my test lab to Exchange 2013 is that If you left the default setting of "negotiate" in the authentication method then Outlook =< 2010 clients would demand a password if the client moved from off the lab network. Everything else was OK, however changing it from that to NTLM removed the issue and I was too lazy to investigate why or how.
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 22:01 |
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anthonypants posted:Well, do you have any devices on your network that blatantly ignore lease times? Probably! But wouldn't the proper response be to ban those devices rather than send out an office-wide email saying, "Please turn off Wi-fi on your phones"? Caged posted:The DHCP server should be issuing the same IP again as the client already has an active lease, regardless of the fact that they've roamed onto a new AP. Could be, I will check next time. Also, there's weird behavior if I move between the dock (wired) and the wireless (i.e. when I disconnect from the dock). But I can't attribute this to IT as I can easily imagine this being the fact that it's getting two connections, so I just unplugged the dock's ethernet cable. Inspector_666 posted:What's your subnet? If you're on a /24 and you have 200 people, just their work computers alone are using up the majority of the address pool, and I assume they all have a phone on top of that. Hopefully servers/printers are on a different network. Nah, /12. 172.16.*.* Lynxifer posted:One thing I noticed when I upgraded my test lab to Exchange 2013 is that If you left the default setting of "negotiate" in the authentication method then Outlook =< 2010 clients would demand a password if the client moved from off the lab network. Everything else was OK, however changing it from that to NTLM removed the issue and I was too lazy to investigate why or how. Interesting. Not sure if we're on Exchange 2010 or 2013, though. I would pass it on to IT, but IT doesn't really seem to care about these types of issues, though. I think they're more of the "is the duct tape holding up? yeah? well don't touch it, then" mentality.
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 22:19 |
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totalnewbie posted:Is it just me or is barracuda web filter a piece of poo poo? Barracuda's mail filters are some of the only ones I don't loving hate.
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 22:21 |
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Why am I installing Windows 7 32-bit on a PowerEdge R520? WHYYYYYY
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 22:36 |
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Lord Dudeguy posted:Why am I installing Windows 7 32-bit on a PowerEdge R520? WHYYYYYY It's a VM right? Right?
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 22:39 |
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Dilbert As gently caress posted:It's a VM right? No. It requires Dialogic media boards, and the vendor only supports 32-bit desktop OSes. If IT supports it, we require redundant PSUs and RAID. The net result is this loving mutant. :edit: AND Dialogic doesn't support PAE AAAAAND it requires Java 1.6 for its diagnostic apps. I just want to take this poor server out back and shoot it Ol' Yeller style. Lord Dudeguy fucked around with this message at 22:44 on Feb 11, 2014 |
# ? Feb 11, 2014 22:42 |
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My boss ia a tool. We're driving to the datacenter where we have some crap to install some crap, and he spent like an hour printing out maps on how to get there. Like we don't have iPhones or GPS. And it's not like it's just JUMP ON I75 TO THIS EXIT GO ON THIS MAIN ROAD it's like we're driving to timbuktu.
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 22:42 |
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Hey man, I75 goes from the UP in Michigan to Southern Florida. What if you miss the exit? God, you could end up on the other side of the country!
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 22:44 |
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Our remote hands guys just ripped out the wrong goddam blade from a chassis during a routine DIMM replacement Didn't need those production servers to be available anyway!
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 23:45 |
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Docjowles posted:Our remote hands guys just ripped out the wrong goddam blade from a chassis during a routine DIMM replacement Didn't need those production servers to be available anyway! Failover test!
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 23:49 |
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totalnewbie posted:Nah, /12. 172.16.*.* Just because your network is a /12 doesn't mean your DHCP server is handing them all out. Check your address pool size to make sure it isn't set to something smaller. Also, yeah, reduce your lease time to something really short.
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# ? Feb 11, 2014 23:53 |
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Bob Morales posted:Barracuda's mail filters are some of the only ones I don't loving hate. Even those are slow pieces of poo poo. We moved from a physical box to a virtual instance last year and it's still terribly slow using the web interface.
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# ? Feb 12, 2014 00:10 |
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Lord Dudeguy posted:No. It requires Dialogic media boards, and the vendor only supports 32-bit desktop OSes. I guess there's no chance it likes PCI passthrough or anything like that?
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# ? Feb 12, 2014 00:35 |
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Pup-up blockers are pissing me off. When was the last time that you were visiting a site and it spewed popups that were blocked by IE or Firefox and you were grateful? vs. When was the last time you were visiting a site that had a form that you had to fill out, and when you clicked submit the popup blocker blocks the page and when you click "allow popups for this page" the page clears the data in the form so you get to enter it all again? Yeah.
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# ? Feb 12, 2014 01:02 |
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totalnewbie posted:Is it just me or is barracuda web filter a piece of poo poo? I was not impressed with our load balancers. Both are junk hardware wise and have a super basic web interface. The ease of use was great for our old admin, but I removed them after the $3k in support renews came back up.
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# ? Feb 12, 2014 01:02 |
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# ? Apr 27, 2024 09:15 |
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Caged posted:I guess there's no chance it likes PCI passthrough or anything like that? I'm guessing not. Also, I'm no VCP, but we use DRS so I'm guessing that'd mean buying (2 x Number of Hosts) cards at $600 each, and that's not happening. Also, our PRI disaster-recovery site doesn't have an ESX host there, and I need to deploy a clone of this freak-of-technology there. New thing I learned that I'll never need in realityland - Broadcom Netxtreme desktop drivers work on their server hardware!
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# ? Feb 12, 2014 01:10 |