In the New Yorker version, two professors are looking at a blackboard full of equations, with "Then a miracle occurs" in the middle. One says "I think you should be more explicit here in step two".

 

In the South Park version, gnomes have a plan to run a corporation. The plan is:

Phase 1: Collect Underpants
Phase 2: ?
Phase 3: Profit!

 

Every software product with a greater level of complexity than notepad.exe has a step two... there might be services to help you through it, or you might be on your own, but its existence should be recognized and planned for. If someone's saying it's easy, it probably is... for them, because they live in that product and have deep thoughts about the problem set it's designed to solve. For everyone else, particularly the folks who inherit someone else's environment, there's three questions to ask:

 

  1. Do you know how to do the task at hand without the tool's help? If you don't, you need to learn that first... LANDesk OS Deployment doesn't make any sense if you don't know what sysprep is, for instance. Besides, reading manuals is arguably a better use of your time than stealing underpants.
  2. Do you understand what the tool is doing to make the task easier/safer/cheaper/better? The best tools try to make "Phase 2" as small as possible, but they're all designed with the assumption that you already know the lay of the land.
  3. Do you have the resources allocated for doing step two? It might be training, it might be headcount, it might just be a block of uninterrupted time... but you probably need something, and you aren't going to get it by clicking your heels and wishing hard.

 

LANDesk's product set is designed to take you from reactive to proactive; but it can't do that for you if you're not able to proactively spend time on it. Dropping everything to work on a customer's problem is great customer service and just what you want from your help desk analysts... but a LANDesk core is intended for use by a sysadmin. Be the BOFH, not the PFY.

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ldms_client 2.4.5 news

Posted by Jack Coates Apr 6, 2009

ldms_client has picked up a few new tricks, particularly for the Dell shops. Version 2.4.5 adds code to detect the system hardware, so that DCCU will not be run on non-Dell machines. This version also reports on the number of crashes a workstation has enjoyed over the last seven days, so you can get some early warning (or refute your user's claim that it's crashed a dozen times since Friday... see? only 11 crashes).

 

I'm also splitting Mac support back out of the main package, so that everyone doesn't have to download it. This is preparatory to removing Macintosh support altogether... I just don't like working on Macs, and I haven't updated ldms_client_mac since July of 2008. If anyone would like to take over this section of ldms_client or wants some help doing their own inventory extension, you know where to find me.

 

The ldms_client_core UI is getting unwieldy and will be using tabs in the near future. I'm also starting to toy with a wild-card-capable registry reader, which would allow for some of those recursive tricks like mounted PSTs and mapped network printers.

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