The End of the IT Tech: Automation

Ғылым және технология

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Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
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Пікірлер: 503

  • @TimothyWhiteheadzm
    @TimothyWhiteheadzm4 жыл бұрын

    Support: Try turning it of and on again. User: Ok, done that. Support: that was really quick. What did you turn off and on? Are you sure it wasn't just the screen? User: Oh, you meant this box under the table?

  • @AugustusBohn0

    @AugustusBohn0

    4 жыл бұрын

    my last IT job consisted of trying and often failing to direct users to the power button on their iPad. There are five buttons on an iPad if you count the little do not disturb switch, and people are never able to find it.

  • @kkeanie

    @kkeanie

    4 жыл бұрын

    That hurts me too much ;-;

  • @davidadams2395

    @davidadams2395

    4 жыл бұрын

    No! Please tell me that was a joke.

  • @ShainAndrews

    @ShainAndrews

    4 жыл бұрын

    So you stopped asking users to reboot, or power cycle... right? LOL

  • @orangeActiondotcom

    @orangeActiondotcom

    4 жыл бұрын

    wow, fantastic comment, groundbreaking humor. no one has done this before

  • @michaeljoyce7548
    @michaeljoyce75484 жыл бұрын

    I've been Help Desk, I'm now Datacenter. Automation is great until it isn't. Experience has shown that you build a more foolproof system and users will take that as a challenge....

  • @peterpain6625

    @peterpain6625

    4 жыл бұрын

    If you make it idiot-proof nature will make a better idiot ;) Been there ... reinstalling nvidia-linux-drivers on ~120-ish cluster nodes (with different amounts of it being broken) ain't fun at all :D

  • @michaeljoyce7548

    @michaeljoyce7548

    4 жыл бұрын

    Not to knock automation, but the problem is economy of scale. The more unit of work need doing, the more time and testing you get to build the automation. Small batch stuff tends to need quick turn around. No manager wants you spending 8-12 hours building automated deployments for 10 machines. Corners get cut, mistakes made. Garbage In = Garbage Out.

  • @kennethhicks2113

    @kennethhicks2113

    4 жыл бұрын

    You mean "a better fool comes along"

  • @Flimzes

    @Flimzes

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@michaeljoyce7548 we deploy everything from profiles. One offs/hand installed are _only_ done in testing. No exceptions. If a machine suffers a major issue it can be redeployed in an hour. - once I have set up a machine, I never touch it again. The less time you have, the more important this becomes

  • @Commissar0617

    @Commissar0617

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@Flimzes but $specialuser in marketing needs a beefier setup with special software that nobody else in the company uses.

  • @krisdphillips
    @krisdphillips4 жыл бұрын

    Family member: My computer is broken Me: OK Also family member: It was working fine until you touched it!

  • @movement2contact

    @movement2contact

    4 жыл бұрын

    *until you touched it a year ago.

  • @nicholasbuckner5221

    @nicholasbuckner5221

    4 жыл бұрын

    And yet you want me to fix it again.

  • @kristopherleslie8343

    @kristopherleslie8343

    4 жыл бұрын

    Yea tell me about it I've lived that life and prefer not to.

  • @Gunzy83

    @Gunzy83

    3 жыл бұрын

    I just tell them I don't work with Windows or Mac (the truth btw) so can't help.

  • @nemz7505
    @nemz75054 жыл бұрын

    To everyone who thinks DevOps is beyond them, this may change your mind... I'm old and slow but did a bit of server ops in the late 2000's before moving to IT Service Delivery for many years, this was a completely non technical role. Knew UK IT was being moved off-shore so I asked for a technical role during my last year as the politics of Service Delivery drove me crazy. Joined our Azure DevOps and within a couple of months I'd learned enough around CI/CD fundamentals & Powershell to deploy & support almost everything we used (we were one of MS biggest Azure customers). Noting I'd not written any code since basic on the ZX Spectrum when I was a kid, but if you've ever messed around with game config files or crypto mining json, understanding how parameter files you'd use for deployment will fall into place really quickly. In fact after I thanked our MS account manager for his support on my last day he offered me a role on the spot and I'm about 10 gazillion miles away from Lord Wendell's level ;) Trust me, if I can pick it up - anyone can. This is the future and whilst I can't speak for anything other than Azure, it's a pretty amazing platform along with it's peers and is without doubt the end of IT as we currently know it.

  • @einarabelc5

    @einarabelc5

    4 жыл бұрын

    I've only really used it for IdP and think is as any other M$ product: convoluted and not intuitive.

  • @hermannbjorgvin
    @hermannbjorgvin4 жыл бұрын

    We have been automating the entire IT infrastructure at my workplace for a while now. I recommend learning programming and devops stuff to stay ahead of the curve and get the big bucks.

  • @stephanematis

    @stephanematis

    4 жыл бұрын

    Site Reliability Engineering

  • @hermannbjorgvin

    @hermannbjorgvin

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@stephanematis that's the word.

  • @sirius4k

    @sirius4k

    4 жыл бұрын

    yep.. started as devsecops last month.

  • @davidadams2395

    @davidadams2395

    4 жыл бұрын

    Well, shēyit! I'm still not certified for CCNA. Now what am I to do if programming is not my forté?

  • @Nomaran

    @Nomaran

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@davidadams2395 In the same boat, I've tried many times and haven't got the hang of programming. Maybe time to become an electrician or some other trade.

  • @17Codiferus
    @17Codiferus4 жыл бұрын

    I feel personally attacked. The only difference (in my experience) between a sysadmins system and Avg Joe's system is my entire network is a 'rats nest' of hacked together services/systems, and Joe's mess is localized to a single machine.

  • @baltmatrix

    @baltmatrix

    4 жыл бұрын

    Speaking to my life.

  • @Destroyer954

    @Destroyer954

    4 жыл бұрын

    that's what happens when you get "urgent request" from management

  • @juanok2775

    @juanok2775

    4 жыл бұрын

    You are a sissy admin

  • @0M9H4X_Neckbeard

    @0M9H4X_Neckbeard

    4 жыл бұрын

    When sysadmins start nesting you know you need to fire everyone and start over, there's few things I hate more than "IT folk" who do the same stupid shit they're supposed to prevent

  • @EidolonSpecus

    @EidolonSpecus

    4 жыл бұрын

    That just means you obviously suck as a sysadmin.

  • @golnectr
    @golnectr4 жыл бұрын

    As a comp tech for a school district, you're speaking to my soul.

  • @EpicWolverine

    @EpicWolverine

    4 жыл бұрын

    golnectr nice profile picture!

  • @jeroenlodder5838

    @jeroenlodder5838

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Patrick Based on this video it looks like you're on eternal password reset duty.

  • @lesliestandifer

    @lesliestandifer

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@jeroenlodder5838 Not really most major places have automated it already, it would just be a matter of time before it makes its way to smaller places.

  • @lesliestandifer

    @lesliestandifer

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Patrick Yes

  • @orcbloodtech422
    @orcbloodtech4224 жыл бұрын

    Lol "Then they go and build a better idiot" 2:01

  • @sirius4k

    @sirius4k

    4 жыл бұрын

    And the problem is that creating an improved idiot is way easier and takes A LOT less time and effort.

  • @rosswaterston

    @rosswaterston

    4 жыл бұрын

    Words to live by, words to live by.

  • @firSound

    @firSound

    3 жыл бұрын

    gold

  • @trouncerrredits

    @trouncerrredits

    3 жыл бұрын

    Wheatley?

  • @JarrodsTech
    @JarrodsTech4 жыл бұрын

    Seeing automation get more popular years ago is basically why I got out of the sys admin field.

  • @Tudorgeable

    @Tudorgeable

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@shameermulji they're called devops now, but yes, it's the same idea, different name and technologies

  • @Demcurls

    @Demcurls

    3 жыл бұрын

    ​@@shameermulji Hi Shameer, I work as a Devops engineer and have been doing so for about 2 years. So, I can only speak to devops in the cloud, and for linux + AWS devops, but I've not seen much demand for networking certifications in the devops space, simply because networking in the cloud tends to be a bit simpler than the networking on prem. Things I would recommend to learn for someone looking to break into devops: -Python - you don't need to be a developer, but you do need to be able to call apis and write scripts -Linux + Bash - Linux is the defacto devops OS, a Red Hat RHCSA is a good cert to get. There are also Linux Foundation certs -Basic Networking - If you can explain DNS, DHCP, and IP subnetting you're probably good enough -A cloud provider cert of some sort - most of the work is on AWS but Azure is gaining ground. If you go AWS an entry level cert like the Cloud Practitioner is fine. -Infrastructure as code with Terraform (cloudformation is not popular in my XP) -Automatic configuration management (Ansible, puppet or Chef) This is a lot of tools, but please do not be intimidated. The core elements are: - ability to write scripts - understanding of the OS you intend to work on (Linux or Windows) - enough networking knowledge to deploy servers - understanding of at least 1 automation tool - The ability to learn Devops is a rapidly evolving field, and in my experience employers are happier to take an employee who is passionate and willing to learn on their own time and train them up, so as long as you demonstrate you are taking steps to educate yourself and show growth, you will potentially be preferred over more experienced candidates. However, don't be afraid to be a networking engineer if you are keen to do that instead - there's a lot of work for networking engineers still, and even more work for network engineers who have a devops mindset and can automate things at work. There are many devops engineers who started out as network engineers, and many network engineers who have the automation skills to be devops engineers but just not the title.

  • @motolaoshin

    @motolaoshin

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Demcurls This is one of the best explanation of devops that I have seen, and I have worked in IT for about 9 years. When you ask 10 different people what devops is, you will probably get 10 different answers. I also started as a Network engineer before transiting to Sysadmin, I hope to add scripting and automation skills to enable be work as a devops engineer.

  • @jinx0192
    @jinx01924 жыл бұрын

    I love the way Krista backs away from the iPad like she's handling something that can explode lol.

  • @SomeGuyInSandy
    @SomeGuyInSandy4 жыл бұрын

    This is why my default option is to avoid working on family IT devices.

  • @returntohome330

    @returntohome330

    4 жыл бұрын

    Family maintenance is the best kind no pay & not a forking clue why their 10 year old dust trap throws a hissy fit!.

  • @grantmurdock7385

    @grantmurdock7385

    4 жыл бұрын

    "Oh, no, I only know big company machines and servers and stuff. This is Totally Different. I'm sorry. You should try Anyone Else."

  • @qlum
    @qlum4 жыл бұрын

    My strategy at work is similar yet different. Basically, we are a 50 employee company, we have no domain set up, just a shared NAS where people back up their stuff. If a pc goes fubar, I can look at it, save certain essential data if people are stupid but generally just asking them to move what they need to the NAS is enough. After that, it's a Windows reinstall + chocolatey for some programs. The NAS itself has 2 backups, one where it pushes data into a Backblaze B2 setup one where a second NAS pulls the data in. both NASes use ZFS snapshots which are kept for a duration of 2 years. While certainly not perfect it's good enough for a company this size and considering I am the guy doing this while also doing a heap of other stuff really there is not more I can do here. As for buying services to make things more secure / easier. Even a €50 a month extra costs will raise eyebrows. The only redeeming factor is that most people have at least some technical know-how, so while they may not like it, they try to bs around it, they will generally turn the machine off and on again when asked.

  • @LJM2stepspain
    @LJM2stepspain4 жыл бұрын

    Your videos provide so much value to us just starting out in IT. I've got about 5 years of AV integration experience and these videos help keep me on top of other important trends and workflows I can play with. Great for internal use even if I can't sell the service.

  • @Jamesaepp
    @Jamesaepp4 жыл бұрын

    Outsourcing all of this automation to tech giants will work really well for businesses until they wake up one day to read the headline on the paper where their suppliers have become their competitors.

  • @petrkisselev5085

    @petrkisselev5085

    4 жыл бұрын

    After having appropriated all of their intellectual property. ;)

  • @madhuguru3130

    @madhuguru3130

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@petrkisselev5085 That's probably the end goal. They saw what amazon did and want to emulate it themselves.

  • @EpicWolverine
    @EpicWolverine4 жыл бұрын

    iOS’s backup/restore is unrivaled (except maybe the Linux home directory?). The “profile” on the phone I’m typing this on (XS) started on an iPod touch 3rd gen on iOS 3 and has been backup/restored through a 4th gen touch, iPhone 6 and this phone, using nearly every version of iOS in the past 10 years (I think I jumped directly from iOS 6 to 8). That’s dang impressive.

  • @wasabininja3494
    @wasabininja34944 жыл бұрын

    As a wireless and wired LAN/WAN engineer working for a fortune 50 company, we've been heavily moving more and more to automation. Cisco Prime, SDWAN and now moving into Cisco DNA centers away from Cisco Prime. I saw this coming years ago and the only reason I still have a job is because I prepared for it.

  • @queirol2126
    @queirol21264 жыл бұрын

    Reverse uno card: Goverment IT

  • @nolaw70

    @nolaw70

    4 жыл бұрын

    Depends on wher you are at. Some are operating just as Wendell described.

  • @ElDarric

    @ElDarric

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@nolaw70 In my experience, it's much worse. In some ways. Depends on perspective ,maybe?... as a DoD IT mercenary I maintain super old SGI / Sun boxes. Should have been retired/replaced forever ago (can't be replaced due to platform dependency, common in production). That is bad, right? BUT.. we have managed to maintain 25+ year old computers and keep them working.. so.... yay!?

  • @boomercorley1930
    @boomercorley19304 жыл бұрын

    Love this kind of content from your channel and forum. Great community!

  • @toadbroz30
    @toadbroz304 жыл бұрын

    HOW DO YOU KNOW MY STRUGGLES SO WELL GET OUT OF MY HEAD. Seriously though, thanks for the insight and appreciate everything you and the team do.

  • @joeljohnston9339
    @joeljohnston93394 жыл бұрын

    Love your feeds, you’re obviously very talented, so please take this with the good intention that comes with it. I worked with a software expert (by anyone’s definition,)for a number of years that predicted IT would be dead within five years. That was 8 years ago and our corporate IT has yet to wither away. Automation doesn’t end jobs, it simply changes what you spend your time doing. Are we doing less manual minutia? Yes. Are we automating desktop, server, vm, (and now container) deployments? Yes. Are we using SaaS to simplify tasks such as monitoring and alerting? Yes. Do some get laid off when they don’t adapt to doing these new things in the new fashion? Yes. All of that automation has come to fruition where I work and yet I’m busier than I’ve ever been. Why? When the business is able to do more faster, they do more faster. It’s called competitive edge. It’s easy to see something new and think, wow I won’t have to do that anymore soon and worry about when the axe is going to drop. However a conscientious IT pro knows that where something old is phasing out, something new is brewing elsewhere. If you’re on your game, you’re not surprised to see fully automated container ecosystems get deployed from beginning to end by the developers. Knowing that in advance you then realize how important it is for you to help them ensure that network connectivity is maintained, that backups and dummy restorations are taking place and automated, and that the application is performing in the cloud optimally at a competitive cost. Sure these tasks aren’t what we had to do ten years ago, but it’s a good thing that I’m not the bottleneck between my dev teams and the servers anymore. Now I’m a steward of the cloud, how it is networked, how it is secured, how logging is being managed en masse. And as kubernetes sweeps the earth, I know I have to learn how to maintain that environment and the ecosystem that surrounds it as well. So IT isn’t going anywhere because of automation, it’s just going to change and be expected to do more faster over time.

  • @jaredflitt8887
    @jaredflitt88874 жыл бұрын

    Love this video. My dad's company spans 13 offices with about 80 endpoints, but in many ways is still a mom and pop shop when it comes to technology. Everything is super manual - no AD, no image, etc. Trying to convince him to invest in those and how they can save a lot of money is very frustrating. I would love to deploy AD and Faronics and get to that "appliance" state.

  • @peterjansen4826
    @peterjansen48264 жыл бұрын

    Even on Linux they are busy making it idiot-proof with those containers like Snap. (by the way, I hate Snap) Linux doesn't really need that in my opinion. If there is any issue for a regular user you just copy the home folder and maybe you look in some config-files and you are done. On Windows it gets everywhere, I count 5 user-folders on Windows with just 1 user, it is crazy!

  • @kristeinsalmath1959

    @kristeinsalmath1959

    4 жыл бұрын

    1. Snap instal this 2. Open "this" 3. Use "this" I don't know where is the problem?

  • @0M9H4X_Neckbeard

    @0M9H4X_Neckbeard

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@kristeinsalmath1959 snap creates cache-files in everyones home directory, polluting it. It also has the most issues with privilege/access compared to AppImage and Flatpak and it has the most problems when it comes to GUI themes and window decorations being inconsistent. Snap is the worst of all modern package formats, just use Flatpaks or if you can and want to AppImages.

  • @tknw
    @tknw4 жыл бұрын

    Sooo good watch. I was L1 helpdesk tech, now I'm a trainer & knowledge manager for said helpdesk. This resonates so much with me :D

  • @djsensacion7
    @djsensacion74 жыл бұрын

    As someone who has worked at a Support desk for several years... PREACH !!!

  • @BladeTrain3r
    @BladeTrain3r4 жыл бұрын

    Working in an ops role I can say this: The burden mostly shifts to maintaining the pipelines, and although the work is less that just means people want faster processes and larger scale. There'll never be an end to ops work. From a support perspective, we'll probably need tech support folk around as long as there are people who don't want to do the research and work themselves. I mean once AGI is on the table all bets are off, but until then automation will need a human touch somewhere along the line.

  • @peterpain6625

    @peterpain6625

    4 жыл бұрын

    Also what companies save on it they'll pay double for upping the legal department ;)

  • @plhilmar1
    @plhilmar14 жыл бұрын

    I don't work in IT do to circumstances, but having to help family, friends, friends of friends, co-workers, acquaintences. Really hits home and can totally understand where your coming from. The poor IT guys must be shedding a few tears from the bottom of their hearts hearing all that's been said. Great vid, you certainly bring up many good points, looking forward to the next upload.

  • @uraxii2944
    @uraxii29444 жыл бұрын

    Yeah. I'm trying to get photos off a dying hard drive for my grandmother's friend right now. It's actually a nightmare.

  • @brianmccullough4578
    @brianmccullough45784 жыл бұрын

    Multi pass TCP/IP is already in pfsense isnt it,sort of? I swear i saw an option to have redundant internet feeds, I guess that's just the router switching your feed to all your devices,not device specific switching. I'm just a noob,but I am starting to save specific iso's for my families devices,so when they blow up,I can just pull an iso from my NAS. I need to hook up a Linode server for a backup as well! Depressing yet useful! Thanks wendell,very informative. Btw I'm just a diesel mechanic and this is creeping into our field as well,I'm lucky that I'm really into computers,cause everything is computer controlled now,and the old timers just cant cut it anymore, sad to say

  • @alexcart5116

    @alexcart5116

    4 жыл бұрын

    Video upload 10 min ago and you commented 2 days ago? What is wrong with KZread?

  • @brianmccullough4578

    @brianmccullough4578

    4 жыл бұрын

    Benefits of patreon my friend

  • @alexcart5116

    @alexcart5116

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@brianmccullough4578 oh! Thank you buddy, I didn't thought about that.

  • @excitedbox5705

    @excitedbox5705

    4 жыл бұрын

    I am still waiting for multicast to gain wider adoption. Imagine being able to stream video to many connections at once but only having 1 outbound connection. Right now each location gets it´s own copy of the stream requiring massive bandwidth. All it would take is the network infrastructure that runs the internet getting updated because multicast has been available for many years. The main hold up is that ISPs havn´t figured out how to make money from that. It would take a huge load off servers and the connections though. It would just require the switches routing a single file to multiple places at once. So if you have 1000 people watching a stream in NY but it originated from a Datacenter in Europe you connect to a router in NY and that sends it out on many short connections instead of making 1000 connections from the source to the destination.

  • @takawaka1000
    @takawaka10004 жыл бұрын

    I have followed you since tek days haven’t watched for few years since then and, today in this midst all of this chaotic times I was wondering where’s your videos of rational analysis I’m glad you’re still doing it!!

  • @TA-eo2ww
    @TA-eo2ww4 жыл бұрын

    As usual, you have some very interesting and enlightening comments. i am not an IT pro but used to work in it as a technician. it seams that most thing will eventually be fully "Plug N Play". Literally!

  • @solocamo3654
    @solocamo36544 жыл бұрын

    I'm part of a decent sized IT team for a health care company of 1,500 or so across the state. We've been slowly migrating to a platform like this. We've been using and dabbling with SCCM as well. I'm going to dig deeper into Autopilot, thanks! Biggest issue we have is the shear amount of different software and requirements between the offices as no two are setup the same. We have a lot of older and unique software as well. Plus, so many people still save 'vital' documents locally despite warnings against it. Squeaky wheel get's the grease and the upper management will not lock it down unfortunately so blasting systems is unfortunately a last resort still. The massive push to work from home has really opened up our eyes to a lot of flaws in our current process.

  • @alexanderdemontfort3022
    @alexanderdemontfort30224 жыл бұрын

    Trust me, SCCM and Intune are still so esoteric (implementing org policy and rules etc) that they have to pay an external contractor like me to help make it do what they want it to do. Mid to high level tech jobs arent going anywhere.

  • @Tudorgeable

    @Tudorgeable

    4 жыл бұрын

    Neither are lowwer level IT jobs, as technical issues shift to soft-skills issues. If you can't please people with automation and provisioning and sccm, and mdm and such, then there will always be a need of someone to answer basic stuff that barely scratches troubleshooting.

  • @KHos73
    @KHos734 жыл бұрын

    How about keeping those nest or old pc's on a docker image.. or vm

  • @AcidzDesigns
    @AcidzDesigns4 жыл бұрын

    I work in IT, had a user call for a new laptop as he drove over his current one

  • @grocerylist

    @grocerylist

    4 жыл бұрын

    Sounds like a good idea, who wants to wait the 3 years or whatever to get a new one?

  • @hammerheadcorvette4
    @hammerheadcorvette44 жыл бұрын

    For the last couple years, All QA roles needed to have Automation experience, wether thats Selenium, SOAP etc. It's natural that this would move along to other parts of IT

  • @ShowsOn
    @ShowsOn4 жыл бұрын

    Freaky. I was marking some short essays on the Ship of Theseus when your reference to the Ship of Theseus occurred.

  • @andljoy
    @andljoy4 жыл бұрын

    Storing masses of corporate info in OSX notes, without having them synced...... over and over again..... all the time......Did apple store them in text format so they are easy to backup ? Noooooooo that would be too easy, they are in some arcane format. I hate users. I can see things going more automated, but we have seen all this before with SCCM and Zero touch and that kind of thing. Yes for the rank and file peons, but for anyone who does more than email and office will still need more help.

  • @ZoeyR86

    @ZoeyR86

    4 жыл бұрын

    Im a hardware engineer I spend my days designing circuit board's and components mostly AI at the edge stuff now days. Windows is basically my only option for altium and orcad, i spend most my time in linux outside of work, i tend to write drivers and software for the very boards i design so not having full administration access to my test pc would be a nightmare. I have full administrative rights on all my work systems but I was also a senior tech and it security specialist (for another company) that has more or less just changed paths, getting admin rights to a pc in my company is like an act of god for just about anyone but the fact our IT staff know me and Know what I'm capable of and has seen my home network (puts the networks at our remote offices to shame) gives me a lot of pull i also if SHTF I'm an emergency backup contact for the head of our IT yet I'm not IT and I don't make as much as IT figure that out........i actually have 14 people in my office and when the human malware happened we had to move remote fast they all work off 3 servers located in my bedroom closet as it was faster for me to get my coworkers running then let IT catch up and mirror that data over and migrate the VM's to the head office. The company has over 10k employees and 14 People in IT i stepped in and took care of our office to reduce the load but still working off the home servers at IT request as the main office has hit major bandwidth limitations and i have dual gigabit fiber at home. And have now takin in almost 300 employees on my 3 servers ( 240 on my new gigabyte packing a 64 core rome, 1tb of ram, dual quadro rtx 6000's and 8tb of local nvme catch and 160tb sans array ) it's a Vdesktop beast. 1 server is purely use for pfsense and it's desktop gear but still a 9900k with 32g ram and a redundant psu just it runs my main pfsense and handles VPN tunnel's as well each user has a encrypted link vlan tagged directly to a private VM (don't trust users don't want anything jumping onto the work networks)

  • @jeffm2787
    @jeffm27874 жыл бұрын

    Our policy is if IT staff cost + employee salary costs + lost productivity is close to the cost of the machine we replace it and perhaps refresh the bad machine at a later date. It makes no sense to loose money on multiple fronts.

  • @falconeagle3655
    @falconeagle36554 жыл бұрын

    Great video Wendell. As a software engineer I agree. We don't even have a IT guy in our office. And for most cases we don't care about security too.

  • @gdrriley420
    @gdrriley4204 жыл бұрын

    Well i hope in the next 3 years of college I'll learn these or I'll guess I'll be learning these on my own. I'd much rather be a data center tech or system architect over fixing machines but help desk is always the first spot.

  • @chucknorres5885
    @chucknorres58853 жыл бұрын

    I haven't officially worked in it still a student but I was the system administrator of my school along with that I helped so many family friends and even random people with their computers that I know the pain I feel the pain

  • @PCmaster0
    @PCmaster04 жыл бұрын

    They threw it down a flight of stairs.. oh thats whats wrong... Wow never a more true example given of dealing with End Users.

  • @night4lover
    @night4lover4 жыл бұрын

    Using automation tools, IT professionals can support a variety of requirements. For corporate IT, a hold of 90% the permanent capacity required might be reasonable for hardware and software , the disaster and surge models would be setup on IAAS using the same automation scripts. If you do plan on decentralized office work on a permanent basis the internal network speed provides less advantage to fewer people but, your compliance audits may be more costly than when everything was centralized. Bottom line drives everything. Someone has to buy the computers and you'll probably use similar tools to configure and orchestrate the network of machines, regardless if you rent or own. I thought the fabric mention was interesting too, maybe that was the Easter egg of this video. I guess the point may not be stressed enough that you still have many different hardware types and each may require special software licenses and management and provisioning things is just the beginning because updates remove features sometimes. Finding this to be a pain point when working with modern web / app hosting providers. Causing me to think that I will really need to do more roll your own hosting.

  • @itznotmytube
    @itznotmytube Жыл бұрын

    Just saw this video 3 years after it came out. :) Azure and Intune have progressed and I'm mostly a novice at it, but we're increasingly using the White Glove feature to deploy machines and we don't even sign into those anymore, since the configuration is set up in the admin console. Users get a machine and sign in, and it should "mostly" be just click and sign-in for them. Using OneDrive to consume the Desktop, Documents, and Pictures folders takes care of most the risk of losing data in a system crash or wipe. And we "should" be able to kick off a wipe or reset remotely. It's really impressive but hella complex to configure initially! We still have plenty of manual setups too, as not every client has M365 or the needed licensing for Intune. 🐧

  • @TheRealThaenatos
    @TheRealThaenatos4 жыл бұрын

    Having been in the IT field for 15 years I have seen the writing on the wall for a while now. I created a system for ease of use with fail safe systems for dummys and outside issues and even a little automation. Well turns out I made the system so good the tech savvy folks there decided they didn't need me to maintain and push the system further as it was so "easy" to work it and maintain it. Honestly I see IT moving to a few MSP and cloud based services and eventually even the MSP give way to the cloud services and support. As for helping folks....well its like being a mechanic(I was one of those too) you find out everyone wants to be your friend. Its like winning the lottery and you will meet all kinds of new "family" and "friends" ....

  • @dolfinmicro
    @dolfinmicro4 жыл бұрын

    I liked this. Not because I agree with you but because I want you to make more videos like this one.

  • @jlirving
    @jlirving4 жыл бұрын

    Started as Helpdesk out of Uni. Then Application support for a little bit. Then got moved into Manual testing. Now I'm working on Automation Testing and I want to learn how to deploy AI Tools and ML to help me with my testing. Overall really enjoy where I'm fitting into the industry, I always wanted to move into that Agile/multi channel/technical BA space (and I still can) (any more buzzwords?) but I feel really good about spending some quality time on my programming skills (Java), learning more about AI and QA/QM as a more broad strategy.

  • @kalliste23
    @kalliste234 жыл бұрын

    LOL. I do IT support ... I literally had to show someone how to switch on his new macBook. Nothing can be simple enough that an end user won't be confused or be so durable as to be impossible for an end user to break. The corporate network gets outages because people randomly loop Ethernet floor boxes and trigger an autoconfiguration storm of the switches. Never mind when one of the 3rd line guys pushed out a BIOS update that destroyed 250 laptop motherboards. "Policy" ... LOL.

  • @Tudorgeable

    @Tudorgeable

    4 жыл бұрын

    Well yeah, policy, as in write a bunch of generic stuff so that people comply so that they themselves become generic and hopefully everyone can wash their hands of responsibility. The bigger the company, the less you do, becuase everything already works out of innertia, those 250 dead motherboards were probably a drop in a bucket.

  • @Zarrx
    @Zarrx4 жыл бұрын

    I don't see how you won't need IT to handle getting this rolled out... Contract or In house. Probably a rise of consulting?. As someone who is assisting with internal web application access control... it's hard to see as a large part of our IT is dealing with the applications and the servers they're hosted on. I'm with a large company that is doing a lot of internal development though. Also appreciate the info!

  • @romevang

    @romevang

    4 жыл бұрын

    He's hinting at the "low hanging fruit" will get automated. He's not the first person to mention this. Automation will depend on the company, but as a whole, automation of basic tasks is the first step to 'condensing' the size of the IT department. He said "death" but he really means a large reduction perhaps? Till will tell for sure.

  • @kennethhicks2113

    @kennethhicks2113

    4 жыл бұрын

    Um, company pays MS, done!

  • @Gosu9765
    @Gosu97654 жыл бұрын

    Asking people if they restarted computer and getting positive answer, only to realise they did "Turn off" computer instead of "Restart" and turned it back on again. There is huge difference between those two options in Windows and it wasted me countless hours.

  • @NTmatter

    @NTmatter

    4 жыл бұрын

    User closes lid, waits 10 seconds, opens lid. "Yes, I rebooted it!"

  • @kaadhome5821
    @kaadhome58214 жыл бұрын

    I want to know where plumbers are $75/hr...

  • @Yellowhound1
    @Yellowhound14 жыл бұрын

    I not only cried by 5:30 I am currently in the middle of re-imaging a machine cause of that reason...

  • @mdh.3421
    @mdh.34214 жыл бұрын

    I’m sorry that is not an approved app I’m going to need you to uninstall it. No more coupon printers EVER!

  • @b2bb
    @b2bb4 жыл бұрын

    As a software dev for a government contracting company, you're speaking to my soul.

  • @LukeAvedon
    @LukeAvedon4 жыл бұрын

    Whoa: Multipath TCP looks amazing. We truly live in an age of wonders.

  • @hhectorlector
    @hhectorlector4 жыл бұрын

    great video. thanks!

  • @akurenda1985
    @akurenda19854 жыл бұрын

    This is one benefit of working as an MSP. RMM tools and scripting takes care of most cleanup/onboarding. Autopilote and OOBE through Azure AD take care of remote deployments. This shelter in place has period has really opened people's eyes about having telecommuting or hybrid cloud options. Home support is almost a dead business. People can buy a new computer before they'll pay $175 an hour for you to properly fix their current one.

  • @Disco_Shrew
    @Disco_Shrew4 жыл бұрын

    2:25 I recall one call where a client daisy chained 3 UPS into eachother and blew the entire electrical circuit.

  • @longnamedude3947

    @longnamedude3947

    4 жыл бұрын

    Hmmm. Backing Up your backup with another backup. That's a lot to go wrong. Hopefully it made a good pop when it went, at least then the damage was worthwhile lol

  • @rightwingsafetysquad9872
    @rightwingsafetysquad98724 жыл бұрын

    All I took from this is that you can play Red Alert 2 on the notebooks at Walmart.

  • @badspecgamer128
    @badspecgamer1284 жыл бұрын

    the speed it takes IT at my place to do anything id have assumed they were already dead. turns out they have like 5 hardware techs for a whole university

  • @tehsimo
    @tehsimo4 жыл бұрын

    extremely informative!

  • @jonboy2950
    @jonboy29504 жыл бұрын

    IT is evolving, its no longer fixing problems and keeping things running, thats just a small part of what IT does. Our IT department leads the business and advises on technology and helps the business gain a competative advantage through technology. We are fully embedded in the business and drive processes to make them more efficient.

  • @justinnamilee
    @justinnamilee4 жыл бұрын

    It was a good ramble.

  • @MKeehlify
    @MKeehlify4 жыл бұрын

    Same things happening in financial world. First we tried to optimization as much as we can and now ware are trying to automate to remain competitive. For me personally, snap/flatpak helps to move from one computer to the next even if there are different desktop environments on the new computer. I backup everything using cloud and local seaweedfs. I encrypt everything myself.

  • @fluffyfloof9267
    @fluffyfloof92674 жыл бұрын

    oof, that sounds like a lot of loss of control …well, i don't have much experience in corpo it …that's probably why i'm tending towards self-hosting and total-control editions.

  • @svettnabb
    @svettnabb4 жыл бұрын

    This was a great episode 👌

  • @heavy1metal
    @heavy1metal4 жыл бұрын

    Just deployed vxrail (dell "hyperconverged" solution) - totally automated over ipv6 .. which meant we didn't even need to configure IP addresses for each host. It just used a service (loudmouth) similar to apple's bonjour to find one another and rolled out the configuration from an json file. Was pretty badass to be honest.

  • @Kneedragon1962
    @Kneedragon19624 жыл бұрын

    You're describing a nightmare....

  • @longnamedude3947

    @longnamedude3947

    4 жыл бұрын

    A haven for script kiddies, state backed groups, and your average every day criminal who can plug a cable into a box.... It is yet another cycle. And whether or not it goes ahead it still won't go as planned.

  • @supernerd6983
    @supernerd69834 жыл бұрын

    The only channel that says "Hey downvote me if you want because everything I've taught you is now useless." Thanks?

  • @kennethhicks2113

    @kennethhicks2113

    4 жыл бұрын

    Hehe, he knows down votes count same as up votes

  • @johncnorris
    @johncnorris4 жыл бұрын

    It's a good thing that all disasters happen at regular predictable intervals and when Fortune 500 companies need to rebuild their IT infrastructure the experts they need will be available and prepared to get them back online. All hail the Cloud!

  • @ToadalSimplicity

    @ToadalSimplicity

    3 жыл бұрын

    This is my thought as well. Companies are an amalgam of random people and legacy systems. Jobs have continuously been getting simpler and simpler to perform. So maybe it means less people in IT support roles. But you still have to worry about people leaving or getting hit by a bus. You still have to worry about the level of support you're going to be able to receive from a third-party. You still have to worry about updates breaking things. As soon as anything goes less than ideally, you're fucked if you don't have your own internal IT staff.

  • @madkvideo
    @madkvideo4 жыл бұрын

    I didn't know that autopilot thing, thanks!

  • @SGCSmith
    @SGCSmith4 жыл бұрын

    In regards to One Touch IT, there's a few problems I deal with regularly right now, and much of this is due to the imperfect environment that exists for One Touch. For example. Apple Macs support "One Touch" with MDM software like JAMF, and through Apple DEP Enrollment. In a perfect world, it would work reliably. In reality it does not. The DEP enrollment process of a Mac works fine, but when it comes to catching the MDM profiles and asking for corporate credentials, it is trivial to bypass. All the user has to do is forget to connect the machine to the network, run the battery to 0% which causes the clock to break, which then causes the machine not to catch MDM (Due to SSL/TLS failure), or bump up against a Captive Portal which is sufficient enough to cause the Mac to be "Jump happy" and forget to actually check for Internet first before proceeding onward to the account creation steps. There's a "bandaid" I can use to help Macs pick up on the MDM prior to shipping after DEP enrollment, and that is to connect the machine to the Internet and confirm it catches the MDM enrollment prior to shipping out. But that obviously defeats the purpose of one touch. iOS handles this much better in the sense that the device will always require an Internet connection in order to be set up, unless someone has "touched it extra" and caused the device to skip past the Activation Lock check steps prior to DEP enrollment. But until Apple fixes these problems with macOS, there are always going to be helpdesk tickets asking for help with machine enrollment. Then there is the issue of OS updates. With SCCM and Apple MDM you can force the OS to update. But it's a really lousy experience when you open the laptop / tablet device up, and enroll it, only to have to sit there for 12+ hours waiting for the OS to update, then to de-bloat (in the case of Windows). Not everyone downloads those monster 7GB macOS updates on a whim. So I've made it a policy when I deploy a machine with "One Touch" support, to always make an effort to clean the drive and put a fresh copy of the OS onto it. Out of the box. And said policy has big benefits for security and software licensing enforcement, too. Avoiding Superfish like issues, speeding up actual end user experiences (versus having to de-bloat during setup), and well, ensuring people don't do things like use Apple Pages for their work when they're supposed to use O365 for their work. As for Multipath TCP and IaaS, the biggest problem I'm seeing right now due to the global health issue is with the infrastructure in some areas being owned by dumb and dumber. Meaning, companies who, for whatever reason or another, sold their network as a billing system and not as a service. To those who don't know, this is a provider with data caps and throttling. I am seeing this a lot with cable companies, wireless companies, and even some DSL providers who, for years, didn't bother to fix congestion but instead charged customers for their "mistake" of trying to use the pipe. Multipath TCP has been supported by iOS and Android for a long time. Heck, Facetime on iPhone and Google Hangouts on Android both use it. The problem is, if you have to choose between very slow Wi-Fi access, and expensive and capped LTE service, you're going to disable any chance for Multipath TCP to help you out just because there isn't a good way to 1: Control the quality or data usage of many services using these technologies, and 2: You don't want the device silently deciding, at will, to start running your data meter. I can go on for a while on this whole subject. It's true IT is on the way out. But there are many obstacles holding back the advancement of tech. Blatant software flaws that haven't been fixed for years and crappy network providers are the biggest issues on my mind right now.

  • @okcboomer87
    @okcboomer874 жыл бұрын

    Love this content. Sysadmin in the crosshairs right now of this eating my job role.

  • @okcboomer87

    @okcboomer87

    4 жыл бұрын

    @S T Alright, I am whooshed. What is the Hollywood script?

  • @MrCodgedodger
    @MrCodgedodger4 жыл бұрын

    Moved our whole company over to AWS and all sites are now running Velocloud SDWAN. It's a good time to be alive.

  • @GeordiLaForgery
    @GeordiLaForgery4 жыл бұрын

    I worked somewhere where the IT Support Manager's desktop was just full to the brim with icons much like 07:58 lol, she wasn't setting a great example!

  • @janesdisorder1565
    @janesdisorder15654 жыл бұрын

    When i upgraded from an iphone 7 to an iphone 11, it was super easy to get all my data onto the new phone. Once the new phone was turned on, it automatically talked to my old phone, and initiated a full transfer of my music(music i put on it myself), apps, everything. All i had to do was fill in a couple codes for verification, and then watch it do it's thing. It was scary, but so efficient.

  • @janesdisorder1565

    @janesdisorder1565

    4 жыл бұрын

    I figured i'd have to connect my new phone to my computer, so I could get my fubar 2000 library onto it, but nope. It was all transfered via bluetooth i think.

  • @INeedAttentionEXE
    @INeedAttentionEXE4 жыл бұрын

    This is why we have a /home/ folder in Linux, and why we have the option to have a seperate partition for said home folder

  • @Electrodudimanche

    @Electrodudimanche

    4 жыл бұрын

    You can achieve the same thing with windows but they almost hide this possibility and in the past, you had to build your file system in advance. Did it, real pain, but it works even if windows kind of scream at you you're not supposed to do that.

  • @bluetrepidation
    @bluetrepidation4 жыл бұрын

    This video reminds me of The Website is Down #1 Sales Guy vs Web Dude... Anyone else remember this epic video?

  • @fredEVOIX
    @fredEVOIX4 жыл бұрын

    our shift work (5+ people using the same) computers/terminals all have two partitions C: and D: where we are supposed to store our non-important documents, after 15+ years the only folders on D: are mine and more than once we had C: become unusable because people fill it with garbage, most of the users have computers at home...what do they do on them ?!

  • @romevang
    @romevang4 жыл бұрын

    NetworkChuck has been hinting at a lot of what you've said. I can see why Cisco put out the DevNet Associate cert. I've been a computer science student on hiatus, but if my local university wont take me back in, i may try the DevNet associate path or something similar with an emphasis on automation.

  • @beemo1579
    @beemo15794 жыл бұрын

    Certainly you are preaching of an ideal world. Luckily (?) for my corporate the senior engineers here are too old and set in their ways to use the cloud or stuff like that. Plus if you even starting talking like this the cybersec crowd would have a heart attack.

  • @fluffyfloof9267
    @fluffyfloof92674 жыл бұрын

    Regarding windows event logs, in "the cloud"; could this be a local cloud, as in company-local-in-house? Can i set up a local log receiver server, via VPN, in windows domain / group policy shizzl? Something along the baseline of an ownCloud/nextcloud thing - i'm talking self-hosted design patterns.

  • @marcelomafra
    @marcelomafra4 жыл бұрын

    8:55 ...by napalm. Changed phones, again, few days ago and there software that just didn't install back, configs not restore. Can't login to Level1Techs anymore because Google Authenticator isn't backed up.

  • @MMmmmVarley
    @MMmmmVarley4 жыл бұрын

    I laughed, I cried, I drank... and went back to laughing. Family/Friends asking to fix their system is a memory I wished I could repress. Damn coupon printer.

  • @RaithUK
    @RaithUK4 жыл бұрын

    Interesting stuff thanks for the video.

  • @rkalla
    @rkalla4 жыл бұрын

    4:24 lol back in the day I helped a client with a work machine that looked like this (not as bad - but you get the idea) - made my brain hurt.

  • @biebermyballs999
    @biebermyballs9994 жыл бұрын

    You can deploy thin clients on a 6 meg connection. I worked on one for several years.

  • @ZaPirate
    @ZaPirate4 жыл бұрын

    interesting, now it all depends on the support for 3rd party applications required on different projects in the organization.

  • @Ramiel
    @Ramiel4 жыл бұрын

    Only thing I'd say is the people hiring don't typically know anything about automated deployment. Plenty of fortune 500 companies don't have this and likely won't until they can be convinced it's 'the thing to do.' I think that gives techs time to adapt, and perhaps 'wow' some higher ups with even simple automated deployment.

  • @Tudorgeable

    @Tudorgeable

    4 жыл бұрын

    What would you consider an example of simple automated deployment to be?

  • @ZoeyR86
    @ZoeyR864 жыл бұрын

    I feel it deep into my bones, 18years in IT.. Also you missed an opportunity on your merchandise, the teaching sand to think is good but instead of a sad face the chip need to be realtek (crabs). Also another shirt idea is 404 error network not found your pc probably got crabs (poke at realtek network controllers that like to randomly stop talking especially USB under linux)

  • @ZoeyR86

    @ZoeyR86

    4 жыл бұрын

    When i first started out of high school i worked as a firedog tech at circuit city lol...i took everything they had us use, and built batch scripts for windows and custom live linux DVDs for backup and virus removal, when i first started 1 tech at best repaired 2-3 pc's a day, after i built better tools 1 tech with automated tools 10x jump in work rate. This ended with us going from 6 techs to 2 techs yet still completing 2-3x more work. Also all this was during the windows vista launch, i was the department head, 18 i had turned my school network inside out and had CS forced copied to every system in the school. So even in highschool I was a bit of network admin worse nightmare, I was very capable as a script kiddy but also found windows xp to be one of the easiest things to exploit as it had more holes then a screen door... also I'm the original creator of "desktop destroyer" the program was made as a joke, I had a script the change the path for IE to that app on all the schools PC's. (#&#)

  • @DrewTNaylor

    @DrewTNaylor

    4 жыл бұрын

    techmasterjoe Going off KZread search results, Desktop Destroyer looks like something else I remember using called Termite Toolbox, and they probably work similarly. Really cool software.

  • @ZoeyR86

    @ZoeyR86

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@DrewTNaylor termite is John's toy yep he has my source code lol suprising it's still around

  • @ZoeyR86

    @ZoeyR86

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Patrick it can be a very good job but i don't think it will still be around 10 years from now...for me i just got bored i was part of the usa cyber defense department E-9, worked as a head sys admin for Orange unified school district, and Lightspeed communications. The job is 90% or more just telling people to power cycle systems and such but like in this video most of the actual sys admin work like building custom images deploying custom network rules and what not is getting automated and cloud based and directly integrated into the windows licensing / update system.. so no more days of building a custom usb / iso's.. so most of the system admin job is basics tear one tech support. This rest is automated by scripts hosted on a cloud based user management system where you assign users to groups and give setup scripts to the groups and system auto configure based on microsoft store and a hosted repo with custom / non store software.. this has happened for the most part with apple microsoft is following suit as this is a indirect way to enforce licensing. Also forces use of the Microsoft store and ecosystem maximizes profitability.

  • @ZoeyR86

    @ZoeyR86

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Patrick also because of the early 2000's the number of high paying sys admin jobs and the number of qualified workers is out of balance "market flooded" but that said a very large quantity of System Administrators are not qualified for the job they have, this gives a very bad impression on companies and has a lot to do with the lack of proper universal testing and certification, "comp-tia certs can be bought" "Microsoft admin certification is badly outdated same with Cisco. The day a true non profit gets a real skills based testing system in that's is locked down so companies can actually believe in it then i can see pay

  • @EDVINUXXX
    @EDVINUXXX4 жыл бұрын

    I'm a sysadmin and this video was great!

  • @kennethhicks2113
    @kennethhicks21134 жыл бұрын

    What downside do you see from losing (some of) the wet knowledge base?

  • @eddraper
    @eddraper3 жыл бұрын

    I write scripts to create entire data centers in the cloud... They're called SDDCs (Software Defined Data Center), and they work well. Really well.

  • @OrganicStuff1
    @OrganicStuff14 жыл бұрын

    Does this apply to coders too?

  • @mysmtpservices4818
    @mysmtpservices48184 жыл бұрын

    I habe nees.im IT for.so long i loss count. Few things that we habe encounted.- remote users use a IE VPN conntection to our network and use a V-app enceronment as we son't support private workstation. The other issues is bespoke software that that is not in general use. which would be nice is to build a app and push out like a apple app, And lastly most companys will still what local IT so they still want to keep control of they enveronment.

  • @bwzes03
    @bwzes034 жыл бұрын

    I remember that X-files episode, Tooms! Used newspaper and bile to build his nests.

  • @longnamedude3947
    @longnamedude39474 жыл бұрын

    Well, this certainly interests me (and probably others to), in regards to simple networking/infrastructure access, no need to infiltrate individual entities any longer, you just go for one big pot of gold..... Great idea everyone! We totally could not see this inherent flaw from 20+ previous years of experience.... As much as I'm sure this will still happen all it is in the long term is yet another cycle of life, and eventually the people trying to break the security will surpass the people able to protect you from being broken into, and now, instead of a single device being at risk, you can infect millions within seconds, or, spread it out over months or even years, going undetected to the wider world until one day 10+ million devices start being used to commit various "activities". And you have no idea it is even going on..... Welcome to the digital age, the age of stupidity.

  • @Tudorgeable

    @Tudorgeable

    4 жыл бұрын

    Like i've said, the less control, the dumber people get as a consequence of not being able to learn what they deal with. Breaking stuff is part of learning, if you have to fool proof access to sensitive data, then you have an HR and management problem, because you can't hire the right people and because you don't trust them to let them do their job. Make technology work for you, not vice versa

  • @Fraterchaoraterchaos
    @Fraterchaoraterchaos4 жыл бұрын

    love the reference to Eugene Victor Toombs

  • @Disco_Shrew
    @Disco_Shrew4 жыл бұрын

    I and one other person provide support for 1500 iPads and iPods in basically the setup Wendell described. User threw iPad against the wall? Just buy a new one, enroll in DEP, Mail it.

  • @Wolcik3000
    @Wolcik30004 жыл бұрын

    awesome vid

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