System Administrators

Do you depend of system administrators? Yeah, me too. And that suckz. Why they say something works, we say it doesn't, they say it does, we say it doesn't, they say it does, and finally we think "go fuck yourself, I'll forget it and use it otherway".

Good I am not a system administrator, because people might say the same about me. Good is also that I am the administrator of my own server, and my own mail server. Pheww...

4 Comments

Procyon said:

I'm not that lucky...
=)

Gimli said:

yeah yeah, well, I'm the network admin here in the store :D so I don't care what people say about me, I still try to get the job done. And if mean while I can watch a few movies, or download a few songs...the more the better :D so speaking for myself: sysadmins RULE! :D

include said:

Are you sure they are REAL Systems Administrators? Yes, because real sysadmins try to figure out what is happening and why what you want doesen't work without forgetting to check if your're supposed to have access to "that non-working stuff".

I'm not defending your sysadmin, but rather the Systems Administration concept. From time to time I hear someone complaining about ALL sysadmins, but that's not an intelligent approach to the problem which is the not-so-skilled person acting as sysadmin.

TIP: hire another sysadmin :D

Best Regards
Francisco Cabrita

Unix Systems Administrator :D
(FreeBSD)

CyBeR said:

I am the sysadmin ;)

But your sysadmin's response sounds like you just didn't detail the problem well enough. We get a lot of people saying 'it doesn't work', when they're just doing stuff wrong themselves.

Or, it worked as the sysadmin intended it to, but you needed it to work differently. Fine, just be clear about it.

(Of course if none of the above are true, it's time to educate him)

Leave a comment

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by null published on March 23, 2006 10:05 AM.

Mounting disk images on Mac: Solved was the previous entry in this blog.

The not so short introduction to LaTeX, PT version is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.