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    How Do You Teach Everything in IT?

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    • hobbit666H
      hobbit666
      last edited by

      This is interesting as I've been wondering about this sort of thing.

      Example, Scott has been discussing with me in another thread about thinking about a LANless setup. Question is how and where do I learn this sort of thinking from. I'm self taught in all areas of IT so I still think in terms of LAN/WAN as that's what I've been doing for 14+ years, but where do you get the ideas and guidance on new ways of thinking? Is it from attending things like Spiceworld or other conferences? Or are there good online resources to see what people are doing and how?

      dafyreD scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • dafyreD
        dafyre @hobbit666
        last edited by

        @hobbit666 said:

        This is interesting as I've been wondering about this sort of thing.

        Example, Scott has been discussing with me in another thread about thinking about a LANless setup. Question is how and where do I learn this sort of thinking from. I'm self taught in all areas of IT so I still think in terms of LAN/WAN as that's what I've been doing for 14+ years, but where do you get the ideas and guidance on new ways of thinking? Is it from attending things like Spiceworld or other conferences? Or are there good online resources to see what people are doing and how?

        As iron sharpens iron, so does one person sharpen another.

        I've learned more from folks like @scottalanmiller in the short time I have interacted with him on here and in Spiceworks than I have the last 10 years I've spent in IT.

        hobbit666H KellyK 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 3
        • hobbit666H
          hobbit666 @dafyre
          last edited by

          @dafyre said:

          @hobbit666 said:

          This is interesting as I've been wondering about this sort of thing.

          Example, Scott has been discussing with me in another thread about thinking about a LANless setup. Question is how and where do I learn this sort of thinking from. I'm self taught in all areas of IT so I still think in terms of LAN/WAN as that's what I've been doing for 14+ years, but where do you get the ideas and guidance on new ways of thinking? Is it from attending things like Spiceworld or other conferences? Or are there good online resources to see what people are doing and how?

          As iron sharpens iron, so does one person sharpen another.

          I've learned more from folks like @scottalanmiller in the short time I have interacted with him on here and in Spiceworks than I have the last 10 years I've spent in IT.

          I agree. I've learnt so much more in the last 2-3 years from just being on SW and here it's amazing.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • KellyK
            Kelly @dafyre
            last edited by

            @dafyre said:

            @hobbit666 said:

            This is interesting as I've been wondering about this sort of thing.

            Example, Scott has been discussing with me in another thread about thinking about a LANless setup. Question is how and where do I learn this sort of thinking from. I'm self taught in all areas of IT so I still think in terms of LAN/WAN as that's what I've been doing for 14+ years, but where do you get the ideas and guidance on new ways of thinking? Is it from attending things like Spiceworld or other conferences? Or are there good online resources to see what people are doing and how?

            As iron sharpens iron, so does one person sharpen another.

            I've learned more from folks like @scottalanmiller in the short time I have interacted with him on here and in Spiceworks than I have the last 10 years I've spent in IT.

            The biggest issue with these communities is becoming a monoculture. If any one person or group of people dominates the discussion without room for new ideas and approaches a community becomes part of the problem. This is not a passive aggressive way for me to call someone out, just something for everyone here to be careful of.

            dafyreD scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 2
            • scottalanmillerS
              scottalanmiller @hobbit666
              last edited by

              @hobbit666 said:

              Or are there good online resources to see what people are doing and how?

              That's what ML is!

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
              • dafyreD
                dafyre @Kelly
                last edited by

                @Kelly said:

                @dafyre said:

                @hobbit666 said:

                This is interesting as I've been wondering about this sort of thing.

                Example, Scott has been discussing with me in another thread about thinking about a LANless setup. Question is how and where do I learn this sort of thinking from. I'm self taught in all areas of IT so I still think in terms of LAN/WAN as that's what I've been doing for 14+ years, but where do you get the ideas and guidance on new ways of thinking? Is it from attending things like Spiceworld or other conferences? Or are there good online resources to see what people are doing and how?

                As iron sharpens iron, so does one person sharpen another.

                I've learned more from folks like @scottalanmiller in the short time I have interacted with him on here and in Spiceworks than I have the last 10 years I've spent in IT.

                The biggest issue with these communities is becoming a monoculture. If any one person or group of people dominates the discussion without room for new ideas and approaches a community becomes part of the problem. This is not a passive aggressive way for me to call someone out, just something for everyone here to be careful of.

                This is definitely true. That is one of the reasons I have stuck with IT so long. It's that with every job or project that puts me in contact with other folks allows me to make room for new ideas or new ways of thinking.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @Kelly
                  last edited by

                  @Kelly said:

                  The biggest issue with these communities is becoming a monoculture. If any one person or group of people dominates the discussion without room for new ideas and approaches a community becomes part of the problem. This is not a passive aggressive way for me to call someone out, just something for everyone here to be careful of.

                  This is a huge problem and one that sadly plagues both SW and ML, heavily because of me. In both cases I was foundational in the starting community conversations. So the people who got involved were often either there "because they agreed and wanted support in that direction" or "they disagreed and wanted to argue the other side." What grows up rather naturally is a culture not of a single opinion, but of two opinions that are both rather myopic. One is "I think SAM would say this, therefore I'll do that" and the other is "SAM is an idiot, so I'll avoid the solution I think he promotes."

                  What makes it harder is that as a community grows that skews away in odd ways. So many people who think that they are repeating me are actually saying something I would never say and have never said, but have become famous for even though it wasn't me. And so you get two groups often trying to follow advice or ideas that were never given or not in the way that it is assumed.

                  dafyreD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • scottalanmillerS
                    scottalanmiller
                    last edited by

                    The monoculture or duoculture problem arises around all kinds of things from interest areas, to solution sets, to vendors and product choices. You see it in vendors who get lots and lots of attention in certain communities just because it is a vendor that is heavily used by one or two prominent people. Not that that is all bad, the IT world is chock full of pointless vendors with products that have no value or place in the market. Eliminating them from conversation is generally good. But this produces false positives with other vendors that no one knows or has experience with getting ignored unjustly.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • dafyreD
                      dafyre @scottalanmiller
                      last edited by

                      @scottalanmiller said:

                      So many people who think that they are repeating me are actually saying something I would never say and have never said, but have become famous for even though it wasn't me. And so you get two groups often trying to follow advice or ideas that were never given or not in the way that it is assumed.

                      This is why I think it is important to express personal opinions and state them as such. it doesn't matter if I think @scottalanmiller and @Kelly would hate it. I would say my piece and then tag you both on it.

                      The biggest problem that I see is that most folks once they have reached the @scottalanmiller would say... or @Kelly would say... stage is that they have given up thinking for themselves, in a lot of ways.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • KellyK
                        Kelly
                        last edited by

                        @dafyre and @scottalanmiller I agree with your statements regarding the fundamentals. The number of IT pros that I have encountered who do not understand subnetting is disappointing. That being said, I think that the problems start when you leave the basics. Using your example in the OP @scottalanmiller, you had never heard of a given tool that a customer considered normative. I'm running in to this on a nearly daily basis as I transition from Windows Admin to Linux Admin. I have no idea what is normative (other than what is mentioned here and elsewhere), and that is a moving target at best.

                        dafyreD scottalanmillerS MattSpellerM 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 2
                        • scottalanmillerS
                          scottalanmiller
                          last edited by

                          To give a concrete example.... I've done a lot of talking about RAID, mostly not here. What I think people miss is that the ideas I espouse are mostly just repeating really good information from Microsoft, Oracle and ZDNet (Robin Harris) who have done a lot of research in this area. I just talk about how their information applies to the modern landscape. I've done a lot of research on my own, of course, but nothing I have said ever disagrees with those three or, really, any RAID research I have ever seen.

                          But things that I say, like that RAID 5's place on Winchester drives is long gone given the factors affecting modern Winchester drives is often distilled to something quite different like RAID 10 is the only viable RAID level. That's very different. It's also often assumed that somehow that means that RAID 5 never made sense, which of course is nonsense. That would be like saying that gasoline was a dumb idea now that electric cars are available - how silly we were to buy gas cars all these years (but ignoring the fact that electric cars didn't exist yet.)

                          So there has become two cultures that I see - one that thinks I'm promoting RAID 10 as the one and only answer and repeats that rather strongly (I agree it is the most common answer, but just barely) and another that wants to spite me and basically says that all attempts to research RAID or business factors is dumb and you should always run RAID 5 and not consider cost or risk or performance just because "screw SAM" for caring.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • dafyreD
                            dafyre @Kelly
                            last edited by

                            @Kelly said:

                            I'm running in to this on a nearly daily basis as I transition from Windows Admin to Linux Admin. I have no idea what is normative (other than what is mentioned here and elsewhere), and that is a moving target at best.

                            That will always be a moving target, I think -- especially as new tools come and go, and you get experience with different OSes (Windows vs various Linux Distros / *BSD, etc). Customer A might use Robocopy... Customer B might use Free File Sync, and Customer C might use some variation of rsync on Windows. All 3 can accomplish the same task... but various customer mentalities will almost always challenge the perception of "normal".

                            scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • scottalanmillerS
                              scottalanmiller @Kelly
                              last edited by

                              @Kelly said:

                              I have no idea what is normative (other than what is mentioned here and elsewhere), and that is a moving target at best.

                              I'll agree with that as a problem. I'm less concerned with figuring out how to teach what is normative in a specific area of specialization, however, as in doing so for the generalist as a base of shared knowledge. Specializations are much more of a moving target and once to that level, people have more responsibility to be more critical in their assessments of things, I think.

                              If you are a well educated, properly thinking generalist with a broad set of knowledge I think that your ability to avoid bad trends in specialist areas is much easier.

                              Sure you might miss big things and always use RPM manually and not realize that everyone uses YUM to make things easy, but that is easy to correct later on.

                              I had a long history of UNIX administration before I was introduced to automounting. Doesn't mean I was a crazy UNIX person before that, it was just one more skill I had to add on later on.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                              • scottalanmillerS
                                scottalanmiller @dafyre
                                last edited by

                                @dafyre said:

                                @Kelly said:

                                I'm running in to this on a nearly daily basis as I transition from Windows Admin to Linux Admin. I have no idea what is normative (other than what is mentioned here and elsewhere), and that is a moving target at best.

                                That will always be a moving target, I think -- especially as new tools come and go, and you get experience with different OSes (Windows vs various Linux Distros / *BSD, etc). Customer A might use Robocopy... Customer B might use Free File Sync, and Customer C might use some variation of rsync on Windows. All 3 can accomplish the same task... but various customer mentalities will almost always challenge the perception of "normal".

                                This is sadly super true. Although I think that it highlights an importance to producing a base for specializations as well... the ability to show potential employers more or less definitively that what they expect an outsider to be familiar with is common or niche.

                                Most of us have probably had interviews for a position that we felt that we were far too senior for and yet they felt we were unqualified idiots because their view of that job was totally different from ours. Sometimes with things that are completely unrelated. Like randomly assuming that all Windows Admins know Exchange. I was an MCSE+I, had used Windows in the enterprise for years and often was not even in an environment that used Exchange let alone was the admin for it. Only a small subset of Windows Admins will ever see Exchange, yet some shops just assume that they are one and the same.

                                And then people might randomly assume that you manage everything through VBScript, but you only know PowerShell or JScript. Randomly people might assume you can program or that you will never, ever use a command line.

                                I actually find the Red Hat certs hard because they assume lots of skills only entry level desktop admins would ever use or see and anyone at even an entry level server level would be unlikely to even know exists (GUIs for printers, for example.)

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • BrainsB
                                  Brains
                                  last edited by Brains

                                  If someone could give me pointers to reinforce critical thinking skills with green IT Staff, I would be eternally grateful. Experience plays a large part in knowing which questions to ask during that process, but other parts are just "common sense" to some people while completely foreign to others. From reading error messages to services breaking, IT people need to dig deep sometimes to resolve an issue. When training staff, I usually ask them the same questions that I ask myself internally. Ex - "What is related to this process that could affect this failure" (Scope & Environment), "What does that error message mean? Break it apart and take it one part at a time"

                                  I have a saying/theory/whatever: There is always a point where you look at technology and consider it a "magic black box". This is where your understanding ends and it "just works". IT people need to be many, many layers deeper than the average user.

                                  The concern is how to prep IT People to push deeper when they hit the "magic black box" so that A ) They dont stop or get frustrated before they fix the problem & B ) Their understanding and knowledge improve which helps reduce the "magic black box" issues

                                  Also I always stress consistent testing environments for new staff. Your hour of testing means little if important factors are not tracked that could influence this issue.

                                  Feel free to improve my saying (or completely refute it if you disagree). Im always open to improving my management and training skills.

                                  scottalanmillerS wirestyle22W 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • MattSpellerM
                                    MattSpeller @Kelly
                                    last edited by MattSpeller

                                    @Kelly said in How Do You Teach Everything in IT?:

                                    I have no idea what is normative (other than what is mentioned here and elsewhere), and that is a moving target at best.

                                    You've nicely summarized why I'm taking an old MacBookPro home tonight as well as fighting with linux to make it do my bidding in any of several flavors. My days of being a windoze only admin are drawing to a close.

                                    Tangentially related: I need a better paying job really badly. I'm open to offers / ideas, please msg me or whatever.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • ryanblahnikR
                                      ryanblahnik
                                      last edited by ryanblahnik

                                      --

                                      MattSpellerM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • MattSpellerM
                                        MattSpeller @ryanblahnik
                                        last edited by

                                        @ryanblahnik said in How Do You Teach Everything in IT?:

                                        Sorry I don't have much help to offer after the mention though, Matt, and good luck with your hunt :mountain_bicyclist_tone4:

                                        Cheers mate, you too

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • scottalanmillerS
                                          scottalanmiller @Brains
                                          last edited by

                                          @Brains said in How Do You Teach Everything in IT?:

                                          I have a saying/theory/whatever: There is always a point where you look at technology and consider it a "magic black box". This is where your understanding ends and it "just works". IT people need to be many, many layers deeper than the average user.

                                          That's a great perspective, I like that. At some level, everything because a magic black box to everyone; it's just different levels.

                                          travisdh1T 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                          • travisdh1T
                                            travisdh1 @scottalanmiller
                                            last edited by

                                            @scottalanmiller said in How Do You Teach Everything in IT?:

                                            That's a great perspective, I like that. At some level, everything because a magic black box to everyone; it's just different levels.

                                            That's a great perspective, I like that. At some level, everything becomes a magic black box to everyone; it's just different levels. - ftfy

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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