Re: Murphy's Law also *loves* demos
And this is how Docker was born lol
87 publicly visible posts • joined 3 Oct 2018
Agreed. Mate of mine was the victim in a domestic violence relationship. She owned an accounting business. During the messy split they sold the family home. She took the lot. And took all his superannuation. And he pays crippling child support payments every month even with 50% custody of the kids, as she has used accounting tricks to write down her income to basically zero, whilst driving $100k+ euro cars. Played the cancer card, even when she didn't have cancer. Basically had to start again in his late 30s despite doing nothing wrong.
Haha I used to work for an Apple reseller, and we had a customer who had a mac that had an intermittent fault on the mainboard. When the part was sent off to Apple, they would send it back saying no fault found. Until I brought the Tesla coil in to work one day and fried it properly. No visible scorching or evidence, but it was enough to make the fault reproducible :)
Except every printout, and computer storage media (HDD, DVD etc) must be registered on a classified document register, which are regularly audited, and you should have a clean desk policy...
Working with vendors when you have an air-gapped network and they simply want you to allow them remote control to fix the issue, and you are constantly telling them it's not possible...
Always disliked the whole sign in process for clubs in Australia, typically I'd just give them rubbish info if it was a written entry form, don't like them scanning my drivers license. Had no idea it was to do with some sort of legislation and discounts. Surely the requirement needs to be re-investigated to see if it is adding any value.
Well said, employers here don't want to pay properly for IT skills, so they dilute the talent pool to reduce wages. I could make a stack more in mining or other industries vs being a computing architect.
And all these migrants are also increasing competition for the limited housing supply.
In rural Australia here, we had some floods and bushfires that took out power to the local cellphone towers. They flipped across to UPS power, and then generator power. Ran great for 12 hours, and then the generator ran out of fuel because nobody could get to the tower. The tower has point-to-point wireless connectivity to adjacent towers (too hard to run cable up the side of a mountain), so no fibre to dig up at least.
There was also the recent Optus outage that took out banking and comms for half the country a few weeks ago due to a BGP routing bungle.
Still boggles the mind that your retirement fund and health insurance are linked to your employer. Much prefer the Australian system of superannuation, where 10 or 11% of your wage is automatically put into your retirement fund and invested immediately. And if you put in more on top of that percentage, the gov matches it. And most jobs are advertised as wage Plus super.
And health insurance is optional (although you get taxed for NOT having it). The medicare system is at least free, although the waiting lists can suck for some operations.
When I used to fix computers for a certain fruity vendor, I brought in my Tesla coil from home to invisibly kill any parts that had an intermittent failure, to ensure it was permanent, ensuring we never got the faulty part back after they "tested" it. No visible evidence, and did the trick.
I got in just before they kicked off Demand charges here in Australia on some tariffs. I pay 36c per kwh for power used any time, and I get 12c per kwh for solar I export from my 19.6kW system (17.5kw of inverters). Maths doesn't work for battery storage yet. Some people are stuck on Time Of Use plans which are closer to 60c per kwh in the evenings, but marginally cheaper than my rate in the early morning.
Demand charges are worse again. If you consume say 10kW consistently for a 30 minute period, then you will be charged 10x 15-20c PER DAY for the rest of the billing month. So staggering high-use appliances becomes a must. I've had the EV charging, oven on, ducted AC on, and induction cooktop running, exceeding 20kW draw in the evenings sometimes, if I was subject to a demand charge, it would be brutal.
Still have two Amiga 500s here, but I think their floppy drives were damaged by one of the old floppies I had (was working fine for multiple disks, then none). Also have a large ADF collection. Would love a solution where I can have a CF/SD card full of ADF files and play them on the native hardware, would the PiStorm do that? Which Amiga OS would I need then, 3.1?
My fridge and washing machine are LG, but they don't do anything useful except tell me that the load of washing is done, or the fridge door is open. I can't adjust the fridge temperature, I can see the set temperature but not the actual temperature inside the fridge. I can't start washing jobs remotely either, so kinda pointless.
Our Lifx light globe still seems to be supported after many years, but only gets switched on once in a blue moon for lighting effects out on the deck.
We have an Intel NUC as a HTPC connected to the projector, smart TVs aren't great after a period of time.
The BlackBean is used to send infrared signals to our split system aircon on the wall, to simulate the remote.
The main smart devices we use regularly are power switches, we have them for fans in the stables, barley boiler, electric farm kart charger timer, and the electric fence energizer, so I can turn the fence off remotely if I'm out in a paddock and need to fix the electric fence. It would be a bummer if these devices stopped working. On the to-do list is to set up a separate wifi SSID and segregated VLAN for these devices in case of compromise.
Had a few over the years.
One tightass client had their server rack set up inside a shower cubicle, with tiles, plumbing etc still in place. They had installed a splitty AC up on the wall to keep things cool. Problem was, the server rack was mounted sideways, so unracking servers was impossible once the rack was slid into place.
It all worked, but was sooo dodgy. No UPS, around 3 switches between one room and another etc.
Another site had a splitty up on the wall with racks directly below it, Condensation drain outside blocked up, so it dripped all over the racks and took a $500mil org offline for a day or two until replacement kit could be sourced.
Another site had the chillers fail/trip off for their server room, it hit around 60-65C on the door handle to the room, according to the fireys who fired an infrared thermometer at the handle. Big red switch was pushed. PDUs have since had temperature monitors installed, and high temp cutouts enabled. AC is still woeful though, with AC coming from the ducts in the ceiling, and no way for the hot air to get out, other than rising to some return vents.
I remember working for a water/sewer provider, and their SCADA network was fully separated from the main corporate network. With only a few ports open between the networks for status traffic to get through from the collector probe in the SCADA network across to the central NOC in the main network. Everything was locked down tight.
If they have to work from home, then they can claim their home office expenses on tax as a deduction, at least in Australia. Here you can also claim per-hour based on some formula, or do it the hard way and work out power, % of your residence, internet, etc etc.
The savings in fuel and time for me are immense, I love working from home. Save 2 hours in the car, and a 130km round trip, car needs servicing less often, less fuel, etc.
Dunno why they are chasing Amazon, just claim it on tax.
Reminds me of the time a previous employer in the early 2000's sent an all staff message from one of the bosses or CEO, with a large attachment. Think it was a TIFF file or something that should have been a JPG or more optimal format. Was a multi-site company with hundreds of staff, and the WAN link at the head office where the mail server lived was only 4 megabit or similar. Took a long time for everyone to download that message.
Strap an engine to it, and turn the ISS into a space ship instead. Or even pop it in orbit around the moon or mars or something. Could even just fill it with supplies, or fuel, for easy access to them while building a moon base etc.
I'm guessing radiation shielding and serviceability then start to become issues if it remains inhabited away from the earth's magnetic field.
Where I work, anything cloudy is blocked, even if I take my work laptop home. USB sticks are also read only. OneDrive, Dropbox, iCloud etc all blocked. Surprisingly Office 365 webmail still works, but not the admin portal.
No admin rights to install dropbox etc on workstations either. Would be pretty trivial to set up the same at Tesla surely?
Surely you can just tell them to piss off? Do they actually have any right to enter your premises and perform an audit? Or take away valuable staff time to handhold vendors through the audit? Surely you can just say "too busy, go away", or some other excuse?
I used to work for an MSP, and customers would get audited occasionally and ask us to help, and it could take hours/days/weeks of stuffing around to track down licenses, work out staff counts etc, which the customer paid us for, and I doubt the vendor compensated them for.