I can't even
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@scottalanmiller said in I can't even:
@gjacobse said in I can't even:
@scottalanmiller said in I can't even:
My whole week is an "I can't even".
I can understand... but look at it from my POV.... ugh..
Trust me, it's even worse from here!
I have my popcorn ready, need more details
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2018 - 2005 = 25?
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@scottalanmiller said in I can't even:
2018 - 2005 = 25?
More then one person? 25 people with 1 year of experience?
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@scottalanmiller said in I can't even:
2018 - 2005 = 25?
I've never cared for people who do the cumulative years experience. 5 guys with 5 years experience = 25 cumulative years experience. Seems deceptive.
With that being said, I don't see the fuss here. If I were to start a new business, I would say the amount of years experience I had doing the work I was doing which is exactly what they seem to be doing. In this case I know that the business has been running for 13 years but they have an additional 12 years experience on top of that.
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@zachary715 said in I can't even:
@scottalanmiller said in I can't even:
2018 - 2005 = 25?
I've never cared for people who do the cumulative years experience. 5 guys with 5 years experience = 25 cumulative years experience. Seems deceptive.
It's fine, when explained. The "people added up" thing, but it's REALLY weird for a company that claims to have lots of staff and locations to have been around for 13 years and when adding up everyone who works there to only come up to 25 years. That means each person has only a week or two of experience at best!
As an example, my HOUSEHOLD IT experience total is over 75 years. Household. If we counted the entire company, it would be insanely high. And it would reflect the size of company, not the experience of the staff.
Like my household has an average of more than 20 years per person. It's 25.67 actually. So my HOUSE has more experience than their COMPANY. That's nuts. And ours is 100% business, theirs is mostly home user. So wow, again.
For those wondering, my house has a 32, 30, and 15 years IT people.
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They have eight drop off locations. Assuming the most benefit of the doubt possible, that they have a total staff of eight that has never turned over ever, so each location is a single guy... and 25 years of experience is the cumulative total experience of their staff, that means that the best case scenario is an average of 3 years of experience per person.
But we know that at least one location has been around for 13 years. Again, maximum benefit of the doubt and assuming the other 7 locations were opened inside of the "minimum experience remaining envelope period" then we have one guy that has 13 years experience and the remaining 7 people have an average of just 1.7 years.
http://thepcrepairnetwork.com/locations/
Any additional staff, which seems pretty likely that no location is just one person, and certainly not headquarters, and any locations that existed longer ago than 20 months ago (which is pretty likely given that their site is last updated in 2016), we are starting to look at a company where pretty much the entire company just started working on computers last week or so.
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I think that this thread has earned a place here:
https://mangolassi.it/topic/17195/certifications-in-the-toilet
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One of the other techs had a Windows 2000 box that wasn't mapping a network drive immediate on boot.... The solution too that particular problem was easy, add a 60 second delay before running the net use remove and map commands on a batch file.
Now, Windows 2000 was my favorite version of Windows, but anyone actually running it in production today, what a time bomb that could go at any time!
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@travisdh1 was it virtual at least?
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@dustinb3403 said in I can't even:
@travisdh1 was it virtual at least?
Which type 1 hypervisor still supports Windows 2000?
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@black3dynamite said in I can't even:
@dustinb3403 said in I can't even:
@travisdh1 was it virtual at least?
Which type 1 hypervisor still supports Windows 2000?
Support and "it installed" are different matters
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Not a good sign....
Not HTTPS and max 15 characters PWD
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@jaredbusch WTF!
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What IT person could think that was an acceptable thing to do
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@jmoore said in I can't even:
What IT person could think that was an acceptable thing to do
Obviously not someone thinking like an IT person, but rather as a developer.
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@dustinb3403 said in I can't even:
@jmoore said in I can't even:
What IT person could think that was an acceptable thing to do
Obviously not someone thinking like an IT person, but rather as a developer.
Not sure why a developer would think that way, either. More like someone just liking being in control and not thinking about the ramifications.
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IceHRM internal user creation
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