The occassional trials and tribulations of a jack of all tr ades sysadmin in a startup in Silicon Valley
The picture above is a "portable" air conditioner. This particular one is rated to cool 17000 btu/hr and is pretty much the largest air conditioner you can run off a standard 20A circuit (it pulls 16A when running). It's one of two (the second one is larger) attempting to keep our second server room cool.
While we had planned on just renting this particular unit until the permanent AC system was installed, it became obvious quite quickly that planning and permitting would extend the rental past the point where it made sense to just buy the thing. We now own two of these (the other requires a 30A circuit), and will hopefully never need to rent one again.
That said, anyone that runs a server room should know where to rent one of these, how long it would take to get it delivered, and how it can be paid for. Our local provider (where we both rented and purchased our units) is Atlas Sales and Rentals. Great guys if you need such a thing in and around Silicon Valley.
[2008/03/28 | /hardware | permanent link]
I was in need of a bunch of specific lengths of power cables to clean up the wiring on one of our racks. I asked my salesman at CDW for "normal PC power cords to go from a typical wall outlet to a typical PC power supply in lengths of 1, 2, 3, and 4 ft".
Apparently that wasn't clear as I needed as I was presented with a quote for not what I was seeking. A little searching (and questioning of my engineer brother), and I learned that I sought NEMA 5-15 plug to IEC c13 cords. And in case you need to figure out the names of a power connector you find on the wall or on a piece of computer equipment, checkout, Wikipedia's pages NEMA and
IEC connectors.
[2008/03/28 | /hardware |
permanent link]
I was at a presentation the other night where several different vendors were presenting their "virtualization" (complaints about the creeping usage of the term virtualization by marketing people will be saved for another day) products to a group of mostly IT professionals.
After one company finished their presentation, I asked for general pricing information. The representative from marketing deflected my question and suggested I talk with them after the meeting. I could have spoken with them after the other presentations were finished, but I already knew all I needed to know. Their product was expensive, damned expensive. A quick search online confirms this -- pricing starts at $20k, and is realistically $50k for all the pieces anyone consider the product would actually want.
Now, this avoidance of public pricing was in direct contrast to another company;, who answered all of the basic pricing questions one might have with their last slide. They also have it clearly on their website. Good for them.
I wish marketing departments would realize that hiding the cost of their product only annoys technical people. Companies need to provide at public pricing that is at least in the correct ballpark of what I would pay. Sure, if they must they can do silly things like MAP pricing or have an MSRP that is noticeably more than customers actually pay. But at least it lets me get an understanding if I can even consider your product. If you hide your prices and you became legitimately interesting in the marketplace, your price lists will likely end up somewhere like Storage Mojo's Pricing Guide page.
So marketers, please don't waste my time or your time and let me at least figure out if your product is even within my budget before I have to talk to you.
[2008/03/27 | /marketing |
permanent link]
The office manager was updating from QuickBooks 2005 to QuickBooks 2008. With a fresh backup of the data from QuickBooks 2005, we went to import the data in to the new version. "An error occurred when QuickBooks tried to access the company file" when converting a file to QuickBooks 2008 (Error -13,0)".
I guess it's not going to be as simple of an upgrade as I had hoped (or the manual led us to believe). Good thing Intuit has a knowledge base article on Error -13,0. Let's look at the three suggested problems and the related solutions.
With user experiences and support documents like this, I think I can safely predict more posts about the QuickBooks in my future.
[2008/03/17 | /software |
permanent link]
When given a choice, the vast majority of the users that I support choose Windows over Linux as their desktop OS. To be more specific, many of the users I support are assigned both a respectably powerful Windows laptop and a pretty darned nice dual screen Linux workstation setup.
The majority of those users use their Windows laptop as their main computer. Nevermind that most of their time is spent in terminal windows connected to Unix systems
Graphical apps on small laptop screens.
Using windows as little more than a way to display a bunch of windows at once.
[2008/03/09 | /sysadmin laws |
permanent link]
I was considering a major upgrade to our backup system (for more robust backups of laptops), but before I committed to making such a large purchase, I sought an evaluation license that would add the extra features to our backup software. With the evaluation license installed, I poked, prodded, and happily tested.
We ended up deciding against the upgrade, and after the 30 day evaluation license expired, my backup software simply stopped working. You see when I installed the evaluation license (which gave permission to use nearly every feature of the software), it overwrote the permanent license that was installed.
Sure there were emailed reminders every two hours for the 7 days before it stopped working. As I had stopped using all the extra features by the end of the 30 days, why couldn't the software just revert to my previous permanent license? Why did I specifically have to go re-install my license?
[2008/03/05 | /software |
permanent link]
Up front pricing, or Stop wasting my time
Damaged Users, or Geez does QuickBooks suck
Sysadmins Law 38, or Windows vs Linux
Users like what is known, that almost always means Windows.
Evaluation Licenses, or How to annoy a sys admin