Life in the Trenches: a Sysadmin Speaks
Anonymous Coward writes "A senior systems administrator at a big ISP in Australia offers
a no-nonsense view about his line of work, the pros and the cons, ths ups and the downs."
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Pros: Cheese Doodles
Cons: Users
What sorts of problems? Like knowing where the fucking toner cartridges are stored?
Admins are the janitors of IT. If they're lucky they're allowed to write a few perl scripts and run them in a 'production' setting. If they're unlucky, the best they are allowed is to push around little users for power trips. Kinda like the janitor and his floor sweeper. You'd better get out of the way when he goes through with that floor sweeper at 7PM each night...
> Any sysadmin that has to log into a system while on holiday in *India* is a bad one
I wouldn't say that. He probably missed the machines...
I don't see "hands" as a requirement for being a sys admin, mentioned anywhere in the article.
I think hands are a must for the sys admin job, especially if you don't want to be a Jr. Sys Admin and perform backups (with your teeth!) all your life.
I worked for a relatively large institution, in the capacity of a Sys Admin, and I know for a fact that you need some serious hands.
Ye gods, how true!
--K.
Sig: Bad people happen. Try to avoid being one of them.
He could just have been indulging in a little office politics:
From: Sysadmin
To: Management
Subject: Everything's OK!
Hi,
I just logged in from sunny Goa here to check up on things. Everything's going ok! My well trained junior admins are keeping everything ship-shape.
Must go back to the beach now.
See you in two weeks!
regards,
BOFH
No, you missed the part where it says he's a Debian developer. He's actually referring to the software package, "aptitude". Damn useful little tool. Don't know if I would put it above communication skills et al, though...
I did see one about 5 years ago;
Wanted: Web master. 10 years experience.
I drank what? -- Socrates
When casual dress first started in the business world, every programmer jumped on it. Beards, long hair, unkeptness. I started wearing suits. When asked, I told them "I refuse to conform to the nonconformity".
If I ever got a job as a systems geek, I would go back to suits just to be different. I like different.
If you aren't part of the solution, there is good money to be made prolonging the problem