Every conversation you have with the outgoing admin, record (with permission, of course). When they're showing you something a workstation, screen capture it. Write notes up for all of this the first while its still fresh. Have them walk you through each server, each device, and all the issue with it. You won't remember everything they've said, and they aren't going to do as great a job documenting things as you'd like during their last week, as they're head's already out the door.
I'm not sure you can argue that royal charter makes a joint stock company a part of the government. It was more of an exclusive licenses, like an FCC spectrum license.
Incorrect. In a lot of ways, the US colonies were populated by an early form of corporation call the joint stock company. These were created, same as modern companies, to disburse risk between a group of investors.
See the Plymouth Company and the London Company.
Your comparison to facebook is somewhat off base. Since you don't pay anything, its hard to say they're 'swindling' you by reactivating your free account when you log into it. Also, since you're not paying anything you're not thier customer. You're the product they sell to other people.
I agree, excpet thinking they have decent drive sleds. How do you make a server that lets you accidentally bump a drive and dismount it? Want to have that ejected drive come back online? Gotta reboot the server. Want to use the lock on the box to prevent those drives from accidentally dismounting? Sure you you explicitly picked a boot volume in the Startup Disk control panel, otherwise you'll get that lovely blinking question mark if you ever try to reboot it when locked.
The mounting/hardware of the Xserve lines seems like what you'd come up with if you'd never actually had to deal with servers before.
You might want to take a look into Centrify and LikeWise's options for doing OS X management from an AD centric environment. We use Likewise open software for AD integration for our linux servers, and don't need the group policy type control for those, but the rest of thier feature set looks quite nice.
Considering its setting next to a pin for marbles and for good manners, I'd say its probobly about at right level for the 9 year olds its targeted to. I remember at that age earning an arrow (do they even still have those arrow patches) for learning a couple ways to tie a tie in cub scouts.
There's still a few apps out there that either require USB keys for licensing, or that you want to have interact some sort of physical device that doesn't have its own IP stack. Thankfully, these cases are fairly uncommon these days, but they do still exist.
You're just making it harder than it needs to be. Use Ghost, Acronis, KACE, or any of the other semi-hardware agnostic imaging systems. Failing that, just take individual images of each peice of disparate hardware. Just takes a little one time act for each peice of hardware, and a large disk drive.
You're not going to be able to throttle at the router in an environment like this. For an office this size, its doubtful that the computers are on different subnets. Same subnet = not going through the router, and just staying local on the switch.
If you have a very large network and no centralized configuration manager, you're going to have a lot of problems every time any issue comes up that requires a change. Config managers don't have to be complicated or expensive (see RANCID or CatTools), but not having them inplace means a lot of needless legwork.
You don't - you have remote disable/nuke options. Once something is stolen, the odds of you getting it back at pretty small, since regardless of whatever tech means you have of identifying the owner, you still need to have someone go get it from the thief.
Better option is to disable the device remotely (Blackberries have a nice set of tools for this). Once its gone, its gone, but this way they don't have your data or a working device.
I'd imagine boarding schools have a completely different set of problems that the sort of private school we're talking about. Boarding schools are such a small fraction of all private schools, even including military academy, to be almost irrelevant to the discussion.
I think you're missing the corollary of #2. You also have to compete to stay in private school. If you screw up to badly, don't show up, or don't perform, the private school can get rid of you. Public schools really don't have that as an option, so disruptive, lazy, and sometimes dangerous students stay in the schools, in the classrooms with everyone else. Private school can just kick them back to the public school. You also need to have a certain degree of perental involvement to even be at a private school to begin with, as oppsed to public schools being a free baby sitting option for some parents.
Its not a problem of being an economist, its a problem of being a knee-jerk business analyst. Economics is about allocation of limited resources - usually money, but the same analysis work for time, or any number of other things. Make up a unit to describe happiness, figure out a metric to turn money into happiness, and you can do pretty fun economic analysis on just how much overtime someone's willing to work vs spending time with thier family, based on a rate of diminishing return, for instance.
Seconded. We've since outsourced our mail, but back in '06 we purchased a Barracuda for my 200 users, and had nothing but praise. A little spam still made it through (with a spam/ham ratio of 18 to 1, its impossible to let not a little through), but almost no false positives.
The Tesla S is considered an eligable vehicle to use CA's HOV lanes with a single occupant.
http://www.arb.ca.gov/msprog/carpool/carpool.htm#vehicles
Every conversation you have with the outgoing admin, record (with permission, of course). When they're showing you something a workstation, screen capture it. Write notes up for all of this the first while its still fresh. Have them walk you through each server, each device, and all the issue with it. You won't remember everything they've said, and they aren't going to do as great a job documenting things as you'd like during their last week, as they're head's already out the door.
I'm not sure you can argue that royal charter makes a joint stock company a part of the government. It was more of an exclusive licenses, like an FCC spectrum license.
Incorrect. In a lot of ways, the US colonies were populated by an early form of corporation call the joint stock company. These were created, same as modern companies, to disburse risk between a group of investors. See the Plymouth Company and the London Company.
Your comparison to facebook is somewhat off base. Since you don't pay anything, its hard to say they're 'swindling' you by reactivating your free account when you log into it. Also, since you're not paying anything you're not thier customer. You're the product they sell to other people.
Sure, but at a distance of a couple yards, it's not going to make a difference. Anybody want to back that up my claim with some math?
The mounting/hardware of the Xserve lines seems like what you'd come up with if you'd never actually had to deal with servers before.
You might want to take a look into Centrify and LikeWise's options for doing OS X management from an AD centric environment. We use Likewise open software for AD integration for our linux servers, and don't need the group policy type control for those, but the rest of thier feature set looks quite nice.
And so now we're back to fax spam? Thanks HP!
Considering its setting next to a pin for marbles and for good manners, I'd say its probobly about at right level for the 9 year olds its targeted to. I remember at that age earning an arrow (do they even still have those arrow patches) for learning a couple ways to tie a tie in cub scouts.
There's still a few apps out there that either require USB keys for licensing, or that you want to have interact some sort of physical device that doesn't have its own IP stack. Thankfully, these cases are fairly uncommon these days, but they do still exist.
Please, for the love of god, tell me they're finaly including PHP 5.2 in RHEL.
You're just making it harder than it needs to be. Use Ghost, Acronis, KACE, or any of the other semi-hardware agnostic imaging systems. Failing that, just take individual images of each peice of disparate hardware. Just takes a little one time act for each peice of hardware, and a large disk drive.
Yup. Citrix XenApp.
You're not going to be able to throttle at the router in an environment like this. For an office this size, its doubtful that the computers are on different subnets. Same subnet = not going through the router, and just staying local on the switch.
Rancid's good. Also look at CatTools from http://www.kiwisyslog.com/kiwi-cattools-overview/ for a similar windows tool. Free for small networks, ~$550 for networks over 20 devices.
If you have a very large network and no centralized configuration manager, you're going to have a lot of problems every time any issue comes up that requires a change. Config managers don't have to be complicated or expensive (see RANCID or CatTools), but not having them inplace means a lot of needless legwork.
You don't - you have remote disable/nuke options. Once something is stolen, the odds of you getting it back at pretty small, since regardless of whatever tech means you have of identifying the owner, you still need to have someone go get it from the thief. Better option is to disable the device remotely (Blackberries have a nice set of tools for this). Once its gone, its gone, but this way they don't have your data or a working device.
I'd imagine boarding schools have a completely different set of problems that the sort of private school we're talking about. Boarding schools are such a small fraction of all private schools, even including military academy, to be almost irrelevant to the discussion.
I think you're missing the corollary of #2. You also have to compete to stay in private school. If you screw up to badly, don't show up, or don't perform, the private school can get rid of you. Public schools really don't have that as an option, so disruptive, lazy, and sometimes dangerous students stay in the schools, in the classrooms with everyone else. Private school can just kick them back to the public school. You also need to have a certain degree of perental involvement to even be at a private school to begin with, as oppsed to public schools being a free baby sitting option for some parents.
Yeah, but all that's left in Cumberland, and that's like being in West Virginia.
Constitution free vs West Virginia.....
Its not a problem of being an economist, its a problem of being a knee-jerk business analyst. Economics is about allocation of limited resources - usually money, but the same analysis work for time, or any number of other things. Make up a unit to describe happiness, figure out a metric to turn money into happiness, and you can do pretty fun economic analysis on just how much overtime someone's willing to work vs spending time with thier family, based on a rate of diminishing return, for instance.
to be fair, they did release an update within a couple days that got rid of the expiration date.
Barracudas have a checkbox to disable sending backscatter. Their documentation even recommends checking it.
Seconded. We've since outsourced our mail, but back in '06 we purchased a Barracuda for my 200 users, and had nothing but praise. A little spam still made it through (with a spam/ham ratio of 18 to 1, its impossible to let not a little through), but almost no false positives.