• Re: 202007140811 link ch

    From Sean Dennis@1:18/200 to Nick Andre on Tue Jul 21 12:59:08 2020
    Or movies about gladiators.

    Or if he's ever seen a grown man naked.

    Later,
    Sean
    "Do you like Turkish baths?"


    ... I don't hallucinate anymore; the thing driving the UFO cured me ...
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  • From Sean Dennis@1:18/200 to Nick Andre on Tue Jul 21 13:23:22 2020
    Watch the parents of a teenage boy's reaction when I tell them that
    their wonderful son overclocked their computer and the estimated cost
    to repair...

    When I worked for Sears TeleServ back in the late 90s, we had some bozo
    call in, demanding Sears pay for his son's lawyer fees because his son
    was caught in a federal computer system using the computer Daddy bought
    at Sears.

    That was a good laugh.

    Later,
    Sean

    ... Where do forest rangers go to "get away from it all"?
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  • From Sean Dennis@1:18/200 to Kostie Muirhead on Tue Jul 21 13:24:24 2020
    Backups though, I tell you. I've run into enough issues
    with people refusing to
    set them up and having inevitable data loss that they're a condition of contract for me these days. I.e. I will not sign you or
    provide support on more
    than a one-off basis for your business if you do not have a suitable backup solution and procedures in place.


    That reminds me I need to build a file server for on-site backups here.

    Later,
    Sean

    ... Very good, Einstein, but next time show your work.
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  • From Sean Dennis@1:18/200 to Kostie Muirhead on Tue Jul 21 13:26:26 2020
    I don't generally embarass or feel awkward, but that day I did.

    I laughed out loud at that one. I had a similar issue when I worked at
    a business that shall not be named. Of course, for some dumb reason,
    I had the speakers all the way cranked up. Then on top of it, Windows
    froze up except for that damn video playing, so I reached behind the PC
    and just pulled out the power cord.

    Later,
    Sean

    ... A cynic smells flowers and looks for the casket.
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  • From Nick Andre@1:229/426 to Sean Dennis on Wed Jul 22 01:42:18 2020
    On 21 Jul 20 13:24:24, Sean Dennis said the following to Kostie Muirhead:

    That reminds me I need to build a file server for on-site backups here.

    We may of had the "What happpens if you are hit by a bus" conversation, of which I explained why ZC1 is built on 16-bit MS-DOS. Backups here are a bit of the same. There is no file-server for backups here; just cheap external USB hard drives containing encrypted disk image sets done nightly and weekly. The images are done using a scripted Shareware program called Drive Snapshot. Once a week the drives are swapped so one always remains off-site.

    The Linux VPS in Montreal I back that up using WinSCP and get/put commands and running a MySQL dump for some database-driven sites ie. Wordpress. The script neatly puts things in a directory encrypted as part of the disk image set.

    Anyone who has the password can decrypt the drives and recover everything quite easily.

    I did the same thing for a corporate client's set of websites; it cannot be dumbed-down any more if I have a misadventure with a public transit vehicle.

    Nick

    --- Renegade vY2Ka2
    * Origin: Joey, do you like movies about gladiators? (1:229/426)
  • From Kurt Weiske@1:218/700 to Sean Dennis on Wed Jul 22 08:50:00 2020
    Sean Dennis wrote to Nick Andre <=-

    When I worked for Sears TeleServ back in the late 90s, we had some bozo call in, demanding Sears pay for his son's lawyer fees because his son
    was caught in a federal computer system using the computer Daddy bought
    at Sears.

    Best customer phone calls? Are we doing this? :)

    When I worked for a large home goods retailer back in the 1990s,
    Madonna called into their sales line and ordered one of *everything*
    from their catalog.



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  • From Sean Dennis@1:18/200 to Nick Andre on Wed Jul 22 15:07:28 2020
    Nick Andre wrote to Sean Dennis <=-

    I did the same thing for a corporate client's set of websites; it
    cannot be dumbed-down any more if I have a misadventure with a public transit vehicle.

    I have done similar things using rdiff-backup (a very nice Python wrapper for rsync) and have several programs for OS/2 though I just use RAR to archive the directories, put my AV stamp on them and password protect them, moving them to a USB stick. My problem is that I have 19 (!) external USB drives that have crap scattered all over them.

    I am thinking about getting a nice "desktop" hard drive that can plug into my LAN directly for getting rid of all of that junk. I'd like to find an offsite place to put the BBS (not much space, less than 50MB, IIRC, sans the 12GB of files I have) also to have hot, warm, and cold backups just in case. Not a
    lot of data but I have thousands of hours put into that data.

    --Sean

    ... AI programmers only think they do it.
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  • From Sean Dennis@1:18/200 to Kurt Weiske on Wed Jul 22 15:21:30 2020
    Kurt Weiske wrote to Sean Dennis <=-

    When I worked for a large home goods retailer back in the 1990s,
    Madonna called into their sales line and ordered one of *everything*
    from their catalog.

    I believe it.

    Decades ago, my mother and I worked for Bear Creek Corporation which is the parent company (or was) of Harry and David (harryanddavid.com), a botique food and home goods retailer. They're known for growing Royal Rivera pears which only grow in Medford, Oregon, where H&D is based, and Brazil.

    For a short time in the early to mid 90s, right before I joined the Army, my mother and I worked together in the data entry department. My mother worked
    in the "VIP entry" department where famous people would send in their orders (this was pre-Web and pre-public Internet) with their real credit card info.
    My mom had to sign all sorts of NDAs and stuff. Me, well, I just worked in
    the hoi polloi data entry department, banging out orders on a VT102 for eight hours from 3:30 PM to midnight five days a week. Mom rode with me to work as
    I was living at home at the time.

    I remember her telling me some of the people that put in orders that were tens and hundreds of thousands of dollars a piece. David Letterman comes to mind.

    I'll have to ask her about that. She remembers a lot.

    My cube-mate was deaf. He could say a few things that he taught himself by holding his hand over his throat and feeling the vibrations (he would have a person with hearing say a word with his fingers over their throat; that is how he taught himself to "speak"). One day, he made a massive screwup on an
    order, shot up from his chair, and said in a large, loud voice (without
    holding his fingers on his throat) "Oh SHIT!"

    We all looked at him and I said, with him looking at me, "Marty, SHUTUP!" He turned beet red and everyone laughed ... not at him or making fun of him, just it was funny that he suddenly just yelled. It broke up the monotony that
    night and we did rib him a little that night during our lunch break.

    As for customer calls in IT, I have several that are favorites, most of them involving work at Sears TeleServ:

    . The old man who got rich off of oil wells on his property that broke his
    CD-ROM drive because he thought it was a beerholder. I did send out a new
    replacement to be installed but told him to not do that anymore.

    . The man who called and wanted Sears to pay his son's legal bills after
    getting caught illegally entering a government computer system since he
    bought the computer at Sears ...

    . The call I personally took from the FBI that was looking for a particular
    hard drive that had been replaced by us in a nuclear scientist's personal
    home computer who worked at Los Alamos. Seems there was a chance that very
    sensitive national security secrets were on that drive. I transferred that
    call to my boss, which went to his boss, then to the call center director who
    was over 300+ techs. I found out later that the actual hard drive was
    located at one of the recycling centers in the US Sears used and the FBI took
    possession of that hard drive.

    . Lonely people who called that just wanted to talk.

    . Women who tried to flirt with me over the phone (that was weird).

    . People who called who then told me they knew more than I did. Those people
    I enjoyed telling them that they had to "format and restore" as back then,
    Microsoft recommended you format your hard drive and reinstall Windows 98
    every six months (not many people knew about this)

    ... I could go on and on and on.

    What was really interesting was that one of the head techs there, Jay, ran PODSNet (Pagan and Occult Distribution System), a very active occult-oriented FTN net that some may remember, was a big OS/2 fan. He knew I knew OS/2 also. On the other side of the house, Sears PartsDirect used OS/2 Warp 4 exclusively for their computers.

    They bought a big new fancy printer but no one but Jay and I knew how to install it. So Jay talked to TekSystems, my employer at the time, and got me temporarily assigned over to his side of the house to install that printer on 300 computers. I got paid $24 an hour -- remember, this was back in 1998-1999 -- to sit there and install a printer driver.

    Took me days. ;)

    --Sean


    ... I used to have an open mind; my brains kept falling out.
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  • From Sean Dennis@1:18/200 to Kurt Weiske on Wed Jul 22 15:26:32 2020
    Kurt Weiske wrote to Sean Dennis <=-

    Deskside support is great, with the right crowd. I supported teams in North America for 10 years at a large worldwide company, and I'm
    pretty good at it.

    Yes, I remember which company you worked for. It just got sold recently and
    is selling off its classifed ads division also.

    In my current gig I'm a solo IT Manager for a small
    shop that's part of a huge global company, and it's a great gig. Nice people who're appreciative of the help they get, enough devops and
    server work to inspire me, and deep pockets from the parent company to afford the things we couldn't live without, and enough of a frugal
    mindset to be creative with solutions instead of just throwing money
    at the problem.

    I admit, I'm a little jealous. I would -dearly- love to do that. I lost the chance to be the IT guy for the local federal courthouse because I was too far in debt and I couldn't get out (part of the DoJ "public service" clearance is you cannot be in debt over a certain amount). It was humbling, embarrassing, and maddening.

    Then my foot imploded and I lost everything.

    So at least now I can't fall much further. I can only go up from here.

    Which leads me to ...

    If I look at my job search file, I've probably sent out 300+ resumes
    to get the jobs I have. It's challenging.

    ... if I can get the money to move -- not far, mind you, just to Knoxville or Nashville -- there's excellent jobs there. A friend's son just got a job making $80 an hour doing back end Web development work in Knoxville.

    I don't know if I'm going to be able to work again or if I will have to try to beat the heck out of the government to get disability but either way, I'd
    still like to do something part-time.

    I -do- like deskside tech work if it's at a place which can appreciate me and
    I can appreciate them but those places these days seem very few and far in between.

    --Sean

    ... If you feel sick, whisky is like hand sanitizer for your insides.
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  • From Nick Andre@1:229/426 to Kurt Weiske on Wed Jul 22 21:39:15 2020
    On 22 Jul 20 08:50:00, Kurt Weiske said the following to Sean Dennis:

    When I worked for a large home goods retailer back in the 1990s,
    Madonna called into their sales line and ordered one of *everything*
    from their catalog.

    She IS the material girl...

    Nick

    --- Renegade vY2Ka2
    * Origin: Joey, do you like movies about gladiators? (1:229/426)