Thursday, December 15, 2005

Which File Extension Are you?

You are .inf You are informative.  When you are gone you make life very difficult for others.

I took the quiz and diz is d result.
Really, I'm Flattered. whahahaha....

Top 10 System Administrator Truths

I figure with enough time and effort, anyone could be a System Administrator. Really, it’s not hard, it just takes practice, methodology, and trial and error. A lot of trial and error. These truths will certainly get you on your way. Let’s get started.

#1 – Users Lie

Oh yes, they do. Don’t think you’re immune either. Have you ever been on a tech support call, convinced that you know the problem and the guy on the phone says something like “Would you put in the recovery CD, restart, and scan your memory?” “Oh, I’ve tried that,” you say with eyes rolling. Believe it or not, sometimes we crazy admin peeps suggest these fixes because they work. When a user is protesting my assessment, the best is to politely insist them to do what was asked until the doing is done.

#2 – Email is the Lifeblood of Non-Techies

I love my non-techie bretheren—I mean, how else would I know what happened on the OC and Gilmore Girls?—but at the end of the day, email is #1 in their book. Now a lot of it is business related, and certainly that shouldn’t be taken lightly, but most likely they were waiting on a warm, fuzzy message from their daughter or sister and really needed their email back up ASAP (“I’m waiting on a proposal!” they screech — see #1)

#3 – Printers Suck

Ever had to clean a laser or, God forbid, an inkjet printer? It’s like stabbing yourself in the eye. It’s not just the grime either—it’s the fallacy that a little chunk of ink could make the machine just stop working. 90% of the time (or better), this isn’t the case (instead, check the fuser/print heads). In terms of network troubles, HPs Jetdirect cards have a pretty solid reputation of failing every few years, so expect to shell out $200+ for those on a semi-regular basis, depending on what kind of printers you run in your office. For those with network cards integrated into the printer mainboard—what were you thinking?

#4 – Cleanliness is Godliness

Ever open up a PC and see the Ghost Of Dust Bunny’s Past in there? It’s scary stuff, I tell you. I’ve seen some PCs begin to lock up “for absolutely no reason” while the innards tell you different. Sure Peggy in Accounting wasn’t stuffing her machine full of cloth, but that blanket she keeps at her feet will slowly shed and the PC fans suck that stuff right up. When you’re completely stumped, make sure there isn’t something inside gunking up the works.

#5 – Backups are Crucial

This needs to be said. I’ve been caught with my pants down on this one a few times myself. Backup, Backup, Backup! Nothing (and I mean nothing) will bite you in the ass like a piss-poor backup schema. If your server dies right now as you read this post, what are you going to do about it? Do you know where the install discs are, do you have a configuration backup, do you know who to contact regarding tech support on that box? If not, you need to get your act together before you have a disaster and a lot of excuses and apologies following it. I use Retrospect at my job and consider it better than Backup Exec. It has amazing Macintosh support and is cheaper too.

#6 – Switches and Hubs (Usually) Die One Port At A Time

You can spend hours tracking down a bad network card or cable just to figure out that a port in a switch has died. You’re pinging and pinging and looking, the lights are on but there’s nobody home. The trick here is to know that a single port doesn’t spell the end of the hardware, quite the contrary. Don’t throw the baby out with the bathwater. If a port does go out, that hub or switch may work for years without another outage, but do be sure to stuff an RJ45 connector in that bad port so you don’t forget (and chase down phantom problems) in the future.

#7 – No One Ever Got Fired For Buying Microsoft

So sad but so true. This old saying used to reference IBM, but oh how times have changed. Linux may be powerful, but the command prompt and configuration files and filesystem obscurity will just as soon get you a pink slip if something goes wrong and no one knows how to fix it but yourself. Even so, with as much stupid crap as we admins have to put up with on a daily basis, configuring some of the ‘high end’ Microsoft software is enough to drive you insane. Ever tried installing Exchange Server or, worse, installing Exchange Server and migrating a 5.5 install to Exchange 2000? I feel your pain, oh how I feel your pain.

#8 – Politeness > Brevity

You can come up with all sorts of analogies for this one. You’ll get more bees with honey, a spoonful of sugar, etc. But generally, you probably have very little day-to-day contact with end users. This means that when you do finally get to speak to one of those souls fortunate enough to login to your domain (both figuratively and literally), you should be sure to be as polite as possible about it. Even if the network is down. Even if the server is having weird, irrational problems. Use please, thank you, I’m sorry, and don’t be too proud to apologize or ‘make nice’ with those who may ultimately influence your career path down the line. The peon you insult today with a “I sent an email about this, do you not check your own email?” could very well climb the corporate ladder and let your rude ass go in a few years. Mind your manners, peeps.

# 9 – Know Your Needs

This one could also be called “Learn Linux.” Many admins get wooed into the idea that “managed solutions” are always the correct ones. A web interface on a switch is cute, but rarely useful. A huge Cisco router may not always be necessary, sometimes a ‘lo-fi’ approach is best. When you want a spam solution, before looking at $5,000 servers and huge licensing fees for Windows Server software take a look at one of those old ‘junk’ PCs you have in the closet, download your favorite distro of Linux, and install procmail and spamassassin. You (and your budget) will thank me later.

#10 – The Holy Grail of Tech Support

…is the reboot. Rebooting can cure ailments of all sorts, can stop network troubles, crashing computers, find missing documents, and rescue cats in trees. System admins all over the world have, by and large, trained their users to reboot before even calling support. I mean, when’s the last time you didn’t reboot to see if it cured a problem? If you’re not, then you’re either stubborn or you’re an admin who knows better. Rebooting doesn’t cure all ailments, but it cures so many of them it’s hard to not throw out a “Can you reboot for me?” to the end user when they call with some off-the-wall issue. Use and abuse as necessary.

I hope we all learned something.

by: Robert Brent Lipke

Wednesday, December 14, 2005

Dream Machines




I wish I could ride one of these.

Friday, December 09, 2005

Welcome Mungkey

Hey mungkey if you ever pass by tnx for accepting my invitation, I hope you'll come back again some time. I've seen you're blog, youre poetic indeed . Ciao.

Founder of Strikerz-Phil


This is my friend Cyril he is renowed to be the founder of Strikerz-Phil, a cyber group who is fond of Yahoo Messenger. They say that cyril is the master booter in Visayas 1 chat room, in his looks he doesn't seem to be aggressive to boot. I told him to boot me, and his booter works on latest version of YM, since my YM is version 2.0 and my OS is WIN3.1 his booter has no effect,I'm unbootable bwahahaha, wtf.

check out there site www.cybercirskie.tk

Wednesday, December 07, 2005

Ang aking pader de papel (Wallpaper)


This is purely PSD, no 3rd party filters required.

Tuesday, December 06, 2005

The former 4 horsemen of Philhealth-Region 6



Stokiz, Buloy, Me and Jaijaix

Monday, December 05, 2005

New layouts for i-philhealth

It took me 2 days to implement new layout in our local website named i-PhilHealth. I called it NEAT edition, just for 1 reason I have eliminated using too much images on tables and some menus. I decided to do this coz as every webmaster would know, downloading or preloading images can eat up more precious bandwidth and since, the said site is growing, i'd rather trade off eye catching pages for more robust but dynamic pages.

Maybe someday i'll bring back more images but as of now, lets focus on how the pages generate.

In the next few months i'll be going to change a little bit of the infrastructure of i-philhealth with the help of Delphi.

You'll be reading some of it here. On how Delphi can produce MODS for Apache Web Server and how can it extracts data from different platforms of data providers and upload it to the main database, the backend well of course MYSQL.

Monday, November 07, 2005

Miss me...blog...

Sorry for the long no blog period. Anyway i'm back. Don't ever ask where did I go??? This Blog won't fit here.

Thursday, April 28, 2005

Gone for boracay...

Going to boracay again after 1 year. I'll be packing up at 2:00 am. Its Tina's treat, so why ignore it hehehe. After all she'll be leaving this May for Canada. I'm sure it will be fun.

Tuesday, April 26, 2005

PECO sucks

By the time I arrive at the office at 7:15 am, they say there is no electicity. yet the black-out started 1:00 am. We have called up PECO to ask what happened. they say that one of there powerplant go down. Me and my officemate did was chit chat everywhere we have no work to do. It resumed 10:00. I feel lazy today...I don't know whats wrong with me.

Maybe I have to go home early.

Monday, April 25, 2005

Still sleepy

I fell asleep around 12:15 watching "warriors of heaven and earth" ...didn't finish. I'm here now at office still sleepy and also got the bugs on my head about our payroll...can't get it right for the computation. Gabriel woke up 3:00 am just to watch barney. i was thinking my son was dreaming, anyway i got up and open the TV and VCD player then he fell asleep again. it's hard to have a kid who is fond of barney.

Friday, April 22, 2005

First Full Blog

Okay...I'm In. then what.who ever made this it s quite cool.