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    Recent Best Controversial
    • RE: What Are You Doing Right Now

      @MattSpeller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:

      @Grey said in What Are You Doing Right Now:

      @MattSpeller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:

      @Grey said in What Are You Doing Right Now:

      @MattSpeller I recently discovered that Trader Joe's carries Nitro Stout. Unfortunately, it's like $12 for a 6 pack.

      That is a cheap 6pack here in $CDN

      We get fancy ones from Oregon for $25/6pack 😞

      I recall that! I went to Calgary to teach a class and was blown away by the price of beer. Your government must be making all their money on vice taxes. It makes a good case for giving up all of your vices!

      Liquor and smokes bud - ohhhh damn.

      Good pack of smokes is near $14 now

      Smokes bud? I thought you said Canada, not Colorado?

      posted in Water Closet
      GreyG
      Grey
    • RE: What Are You Doing Right Now

      @MattSpeller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:

      @Grey said in What Are You Doing Right Now:

      @MattSpeller I recently discovered that Trader Joe's carries Nitro Stout. Unfortunately, it's like $12 for a 6 pack.

      That is a cheap 6pack here in $CDN

      We get fancy ones from Oregon for $25/6pack 😞

      I recall that! I went to Calgary to teach a class and was blown away by the price of beer. Your government must be making all their money on vice taxes. It makes a good case for giving up all of your vices!

      posted in Water Closet
      GreyG
      Grey
    • RE: What Are You Doing Right Now

      @DustinB3403 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:

      @Grey And that is expensive? Or maybe I'm just used to paying for expensive beer...

      I usually pay about $8-9 for a 6 pack of beer (Avery, Left Hand, or Guinness).

      posted in Water Closet
      GreyG
      Grey
    • RE: What Are You Doing Right Now

      @MattSpeller I recently discovered that Trader Joe's carries Nitro Stout. Unfortunately, it's like $12 for a 6 pack.

      posted in Water Closet
      GreyG
      Grey
    • RE: what windows server should I choose for Active directory?

      @Dashrender said in what windows server should I choose for Active directory?:

      @Grey said in what windows server should I choose for Active directory?:

      Since you're starting with a clean slate, I suggest you go with server 2016, and set that up on a robust hypervisor like Hyper-V (so you can leverage some license benefits and save money). Be sure to talk to your MS resale rep and get your licensing under control before you really embark on your design. Once you are satisfied that you and your reps have the licensing planned out, get a pair of domain controllers set up with both of them running DNS and DHCP -- do not use Cisco devices despite what your cert training said; just use helper addresses. Both servers should be set up and running as a peer (the concept of primary and secondary domain controllers is a dead concept, despite what your computer engineering degree or professors may have said). They will have the ability to fail over, and tehy should not be running on the same hypervisor platform (yes, you need 2 hypervisors -- 2 hosts). If your business is cheap, you can get away with a single hypervisor and 2 servers (guests) on them, though you need to explain the concept of uptime and service requirements to them if that's the case. Of course, it's the business that makes the decision on how much to spend and, I gather that they've hired a Jr. SysAdmin to do Sr. work, so they're likely unwilling to spend on infrastructure. Check with xByte and/or Stallard Tech to see if you can get some good second-hand equipment.

      You make this blanket recommendation of a dual physical server setup without knowing the environment at all. If there is no need for a second physical server, this is a pretty huge expense that probably isn't needed, for something that doesn't fail that often - and even if it does, can often be easy to get around while repairs are made.

      Is it the best, of course it is, but is it necessary? Often it's not.
      Just like the idea of an AD in general. Does he need it? He already had 100+ devices deployed and has no AD, it might be better to go another direction altogether.

      These are things your CDW sales rep won't consider for you - instead they will simply ask you how many servers you have - OK you need that many server CALs, how many end points, ok that many CALs, etc. But one thing they won't offer is that you don't use AD all, instead use Atera to manage the PCs, and don't worry about local logons. (now that doesn't mean that during deployment you still couldn't setup a local admin account that you know the username/password to and setup the user as a non local admin).

      ¯_(ツ)_/¯
      We have different design philosophies and implementations. My goal is reliability. Yours is ... well, something else.
      YrO0tQg.jpg

      posted in IT Discussion
      GreyG
      Grey
    • RE: what windows server should I choose for Active directory?

      @Dashrender I completely agree. In most circumstances, you and I would go a different route. For someone that needs licensing as a Jr. level, the path I suggested can be more expedient. Obviously, it depends on the CDW rep you get. My experience with CDW has been fairly good, the opposite of what you describe in fact. Once an understanding is reached on the endgame goal for licensing, every CDW licensing rep has been very good, in fact.

      posted in IT Discussion
      GreyG
      Grey
    • RE: what windows server should I choose for Active directory?

      @Dashrender said in what windows server should I choose for Active directory?:

      @Grey said in what windows server should I choose for Active directory?:

      Be sure to talk to your MS resale rep and get your licensing under control before you really embark on your design.

      I couldn't disagree with this more. Perhaps the GreenGuy over on SW would be worth talking to, but in general the MS sales reps I've spoken to will contradict each other on the licensing requirements.

      if you don't know what you need for licensing, you either a) need post in groups like this and get their opinion, or b) hire a consultant who you will accept their guidance on these matters.

      Actually, every aspect of this project needs to go one of these two directions. Since you can't be the head of IT (lack of experience), you need to find experience who can be.

      The OP has no licensing experience and, as much as I love Chris @ Microsoft, I doubt that it's an easy discussion to have with him. I imagine it would be something like, "I know nothing about licensing Microsoft products. Tell me everything." This is a much easier discussion with a CDW rep where you can say, "I want to get Hyper-V set up and start my AD. Please put together a quote."

      posted in IT Discussion
      GreyG
      Grey
    • RE: what windows server should I choose for Active directory?

      @Alan said in what windows server should I choose for Active directory?:

      @Grey This is my first IT job and started as a part-time help desk and part-time network tech . I don't have the experience but I do have a good background as I graduated with a computer engineering degree and got Cisco certs!
      but this is my first step on getting experience

      I wish you all the best as you start your career. I've a lot of experience in coming in after someone such as yourself, with limited experience, has set up an AD system and/or infrastructure, and I get paid as a contractor (at $150/hour) to clean up the mess. Typically, what I see is that someone had absolutely no clue how things actually work and set up login scripts instead of GPOs, only set up one domain controller, didn't set up any virtualization and had no plan for backups, if any were even implemented.

      Since you're starting with a clean slate, I suggest you go with server 2016, and set that up on a robust hypervisor like Hyper-V (so you can leverage some license benefits and save money). Be sure to talk to your MS resale rep and get your licensing under control before you really embark on your design. Once you are satisfied that you and your reps have the licensing planned out, get a pair of domain controllers set up with both of them running DNS and DHCP -- do not use Cisco devices despite what your cert training said; just use helper addresses. Both servers should be set up and running as a peer (the concept of primary and secondary domain controllers is a dead concept, despite what your computer engineering degree or professors may have said). They will have the ability to fail over, and tehy should not be running on the same hypervisor platform (yes, you need 2 hypervisors -- 2 hosts). If your business is cheap, you can get away with a single hypervisor and 2 servers (guests) on them, though you need to explain the concept of uptime and service requirements to them if that's the case. Of course, it's the business that makes the decision on how much to spend and, I gather that they've hired a Jr. SysAdmin to do Sr. work, so they're likely unwilling to spend on infrastructure. Check with xByte and/or Stallard Tech to see if you can get some good second-hand equipment.

      When you start adding systems to the domain, people are going to lose files and settings. They'll be in the workstation, but under a different profile. You'll have to migrate them. Check out Easy Transfer; it's part of Win7. I've used it before for exactly this kind of migration and it should do what you need.

      You'll want to set up a file and printer server at some point; be sure to spec out storage with backup (Unitrends is my go-to) that's at least 50% over current capacity, if not more.

      Once you have your AD servers and your file/print, you can look at exchange, or O365 to start leveraging more features of AD.

      posted in IT Discussion
      GreyG
      Grey
    • RE: What Are You Doing Right Now

      @travisdh1 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:

      @Grey said in What Are You Doing Right Now:

      Currently watching about 17tb of data migrate from point A to B with robocopy /move option.

      I arrived this morning to find my small, little 1tb transfer that I started Friday got nixed by the latest Windows Update auto-reboot 😢

      Hope you have something better than a 1gb network for that!

      It's all local storage (DAS).

      posted in Water Closet
      GreyG
      Grey
    • RE: What Are You Doing Right Now

      Currently watching about 17tb of data migrate from point A to B with robocopy /move option.
      lotviDE.png

      posted in Water Closet
      GreyG
      Grey
    • RE: What Are You Doing Right Now

      @RojoLoco said in What Are You Doing Right Now:

      @Grey said in What Are You Doing Right Now:

      @RojoLoco I slept most of Sunday. It was, as you say, glorious.

      It feels great to just recharge every so often.

      Yep! Woke up at 10, cooked breakfast, watched TV and took a nap from 2-6, made dinner, played some Crypt of the Necrodancer and ARK, went to bed at 12. Incidentally, playing as Monk in that game is really difficult.

      posted in Water Closet
      GreyG
      Grey
    • RE: What Are You Doing Right Now

      @RojoLoco I slept most of Sunday. It was, as you say, glorious.

      posted in Water Closet
      GreyG
      Grey
    • RE: what windows server should I choose for Active directory?

      @Alan 2012 r2 is the current standard here (and my preference), but it is up to you to decide how to move forward with your own implementation. If you're building an AD infrastructure, you really shouldn't have to ask this kind of question, especially if you've been hired as a SysAdmin. Honestly, asking this kind of question makes me wonder about your experience in IT.

      posted in IT Discussion
      GreyG
      Grey
    • RE: What did you have for lunch or dinner today?

      Rhubarb pie is the best. I haven't had any in >20 years.

      posted in Water Closet
      GreyG
      Grey
    • RE: What Are You Doing Right Now

      @WrCombs said in What Are You Doing Right Now:

      Just got told i cant add friends on Steam until i pay for $5.00 USD or more.. well i guess i wont be social for a while on Steam.

      Yeah, there are a lot of people creating new accounts to trade for virtual items and scamming others out of those items for real world money. By using the $5 limit, they can associate new accounts to a bank or paper trail, and deter the scammers.

      Go pick up Tropico! You can get the whole bundle for $31 and it's worth it.

      posted in Water Closet
      GreyG
      Grey
    • RE: What Are You Doing Right Now

      @Grey said in What Are You Doing Right Now:

      Installing my first ever Rasperry Pi (a 3) to use as a 'RetroPi' emulator.

      STALLED! No HDMI cables in my stock. 😞

      posted in Water Closet
      GreyG
      Grey
    • RE: What Are You Doing Right Now

      Installing my first ever Rasperry Pi (a 3) to use as a 'RetroPi' emulator.

      posted in Water Closet
      GreyG
      Grey
    • RE: SANs in the Enterprise?

      @travisdh1 said in SANs in the Enterprise?:

      @NetworkNerd said in SANs in the Enterprise?:

      We're in the process of deploying a Dell MD3820i SAN with self-encrypting drives. It will give us 18 TB usable once fully configured if memory serves and has 4 SSDs for caching. This is for a PEO headquartered in Dallas. We have around 60 employees and will end up having about 15 or so VMs in our cluster of two ESXi hosts (maybe slightly more VMs). This is only site # 1. I believe we will have this setup mirrored in our datacenter later this year and will eventually begin to host different things for clients.

      The SAN and other gear had been purchased already when I started here in early December.

      A MD even, at least it's not the MD2000 series, not that that is saying much.

      Yes, there's an MD2000 here with 2x FreeNAS augmenting them. 500 users. 126 VMs. See above about the kool-aid.

      posted in IT Discussion
      GreyG
      Grey
    • RE: SANs in the Enterprise?

      @travisdh1 said in SANs in the Enterprise?:

      @Grey said in SANs in the Enterprise?:

      I'm doing research for comparisons to an environment that I'm working in now with FreeNAS as the primary san in the enterprise.

      Ewe, yuck.

      Yes, I'm trying to convince them to move away from that "investment" and it's so heavily ingrained, that I'm having trouble pulling the kool-aid out of their fridge even as it's killing them.

      posted in IT Discussion
      GreyG
      Grey
    • RE: IEAK

      @Dashrender I guess it's more deprecated than I thought!

      posted in IT Discussion
      GreyG
      Grey
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