PLEASE PATRONIZE OUR SPONSORS!
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#11
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#12
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I am the VP of IT for a regional insurance carrier. I spend most of my time developing software but I also deal with infrastructure - networking, servers, disaster planning and recovery, security etc. The buck stops here when it comes to anything IT related. When I get home last thing I want to do is look at another computer, so I wrench on the cubs, work on the lawn etc. |
#13
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Ya'll got some fun stuff there! I used to work at a local Computer Company/Internet Provider and one of my favorite parts was going into the server room. They had about a dozen full size server racks full of servers, routers, gateways, telcom equipment, and whatever else the mind can imagine not to mention being climate controlled, as well. I have some pics stashed somewhere I'll have to dig for when I get home.
Nowadays I am less involved in the IT world (at least at work). I basically get to be front line tech support for a 76 room living community. The room behind my office has all the land lines, the T1 lines in, the VOIP setup, internet gateways throughout building come back into here, our CNA building IP phones come back through here; the whole kit and caboodle. I'm not "technically" allowed to touch much of it but I'm a child of the "what they don't know won't hurt 'em" philosophy If I had a dollar for every time I've saved a call to corporate to fix something, I could take a week off. Apparently we're in the process of a system upgrade adding in local network storage, new backups, battery backups, and more I don't know about. I keep getting random packages each week but I don't get to open 'em. Kinda excited to see what the company sprung for!
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-Ryan
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#14
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Uh oh. Anything workers comp related?
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#15
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Virtualization has come a long way and you're right; with the power machines have nowadays you can replace a dozen older machines with one new one and still have horsepower left to spare. Amazing what has come about in the last 10 years. SSD's with multiple gigabyte transfer rates, multicore CPU's, triple & quad channel memory, virtualization, 10gbe, heck wireless networking that has more bandwidth than I'll probably ever need! Anywho, thanks for the sharing
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-Ryan
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#16
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Some of it we do, some of it goes to a local college that refurbishes computers for students that can't afford one, some of it goes straight to Goodwill.
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#17
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Hat off to you, there's no job harder than dealing with people. Though older folks are a lot more polite.
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#18
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That's probably why I spend my off time when I'm not doing something with the wife working on computers or Cubs or home audio/video; it's a quiet, solitary way to unwind and just feels good when you can make something work without the pressure of 81 residents plus another 50+ staff waiting on you. Ahh the simpler times in life when I wasn't on call 24/7
__________________
-Ryan
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#19
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Not exactly... surgeons office. Everything is in-house for our business--we do not outsource any IT function (big perk--job security). There are two of us IT guys to cover 55 employees spanning 4 offices. We're heavily virtualized as well--two hosts running about 25 virtual servers, but we still have a couple of physical servers around.
We run a 3-year cycle for employee devices and a 5-year cycle for servers as far as replacements go. Most devices then become "IT Toys" when they're decommissioned. We use them as test beds for vetting changes and for creating experimental devices. |
#20
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I work for an IT company - specifically handling projects for migrations and integration of software. We install VMware everywhere - some really dense installations have 80+ VMs running on the hardware which means that the hardware is super beefy and attached to a SAN with N+1 redundancy on the ESXi side. This is for software development shops to develop software and perform regression analysis on each release and for Virtual Desktop Infrastructure clients who use thin clients where all computing work is performed on server infrastructure and the computer is more of a consumption device. We also do data recovery and have a bunch of cool toys to recovery from failed RAID arrays, Tapes or flash media; think of it as a mini On-Track shop. Some of the most interesting work i've done is to write interfaces (for medical software of all things) to allow different programs that were never designed to talk to each other to exchange data. Also we play a fair bit with telephony, in fact we take care of a 24x7x365 call center with offices all over the country which can get interesting when things go sideways! Sorry i think this is off topic for the OP; i have a fairly basic higher end desktop and a pretty worn out Dell Latitude laptop (wear and tear from being in and out of the bag all day) but nothing really all that fancy. I don't need that much to connect to the stuff i'm working on which is exponentially more powerful than my computer. |
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Cub Cadet is a premium line of outdoor power equipment, established in 1961 as part of International Harvester. During the 1960s, IH initiated an entirely new line of lawn and garden equipment aimed at the owners rural homes with large yards and private gardens. There were a wide variety of Cub Cadet branded and after-market attachments available; including mowers, blades, snow blowers, front loaders, plows, carts, etc. Cub Cadet advertising at that time harped on their thorough testing by "boys - acknowledged by many as the world's worst destructive force!". Cub Cadets became known for their dependability and rugged construction.
MTD Products, Inc. of Cleveland, Ohio purchased the Cub Cadet brand from International Harvester in 1981. Cub Cadet was held as a wholly owned subsidiary for many years following this acquisition, which allowed them to operate independently. Recently, MTD has taken a more aggressive role and integrated Cub Cadet into its other lines of power equipment.
This website and forum are not affiliated with or sponsored by MTD Products Inc, which owns the CUB CADET trademarks. It is not an official MTD Products Inc, website, and MTD Products Inc, is not responsible for any of its content. The official MTD Products Inc, website can be found at: http://www.mtdproducts.com. The information and opinions expressed on this website are the responsibility of the website's owner and/or it's members, and do not represent the opinions of MTD Products Inc. IH, INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER are registered trademark of CNH America LLC
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