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"Sysadmin of the Year" Winners Announced

lisah writes "Ten winners of this year's 'Sysadmin of the Year' contest have been announced and, while Robin 'Roblimo' Miller says it's not quite like winning the Miss America contest, being selected from approximately 2,500 entrants is nothing to sneeze at. This year's first place winner battled an office fire to save a RAID backup server, while another IT manager won an honorable mention for his dedicated work at a yarn store. From the article, '[The nominating entry said:] Any man who would take on a position at a yarn store, much less a technological position while surrounded by a dozen women, ages 55+ deserves some kind of reward...'" Linux.com and Slashdot are both owned by OSTG.

3 of 206 comments (clear)

  1. Something smells crispy... by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... battled an office fire to save a RAID backup server ...

    Of course, the sysadmin did have a complete backup set of tapes stored offsite? I would think that company could afford to let the hardware go up in smoke instead of facing a possible lawsuit if the sysadmin died on the job.

  2. A game of inches... by jj00 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's a thin line between winner and (ultimate) loser:

    Scenario 1:
    Man risks life to save RAID server, and lives.
    Reward: System admin of year, free t-shirt, maybe a free watch from company at holiday party.

    Scenario 2:
    Man risks life to save RAID server, dies in process.
    Reward: Gets mentioned in every system admin journal of something you should not do.

    Scenario 3:
    Man backs up RAID server to remote location and evacuates building before it collapses.
    Reward: Lives fruitful life with wife and kids.

    I know that Hindsight is 20/20, but it had to be said.

  3. Re:sysadmins by lysithea_1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Some companies aren't fortunate enough to have large hardware budgets. In fact, smaller companies operating on a shoestring are lucky to even afford the minimal hardware for day-to-day operations, much less setup a RAID server. As mentioned in the SAOTY submission, everyone else walked out of the burning building with their desktops - the sacrifice is that Sean took out the backup server to safety and let his own personal computer burn up in the fire. Yes, by personal I do mean that the company did not even provide a computer for the job. So, it was either take the RAID out or face telling 20 people that that was their last day of employment. The personal computer was where all our digital music (all legal I might add) was actually kept. ;-) And just to give a scope of how devastating this fire actually was, noone in that building was allowed back in to salvage anything due to structural instability. Everything whether it might have been salvageable or not was bulldozed over. Without that backup machine, there would have been no hope picking the company up out of the ashes. Some sysadmins have to work with what they are given. When you are given very little - in terms of hardware, budgets, and even a competitive salary - you have to make the best of things and just make it work.