Neil's profileNeil's SpacePhotosBlogListsMore Tools Help

Neil MacMurchy

Occupation
Interests
I am a PM for a municipal gov. and also a Microsoft Certified Trainer.
November 10

IT as a Career Choice

 

In the October issue of Certification Magazine, Editor Tim Sosbe says:

“Whether you’re fighting middle-of-the-night network assaults or simply burning through brain cells trying to build a new system, IT is a job that isn’t about banker’s hours. As a career choice, it’s draining and demanding, exhaustive and exhausting. Whether you’re fighting middle-of-the-night network assaults or simply burning through brain cells trying to build a new system, IT is a job that isn’t about banker’s hours. As a career choice, it’s draining and demanding, exhaustive and exhausting. And yet, you love it.

That’s not just my assessment — the recently released “Tech Appeal” report from Dice shows an overwhelming sense of career satisfaction among IT experts. For an industry beset by recession, threatened by outsourcing and plagued by a variety of challenges, that’s pretty remarkable.

According to Dice, 94 percent of IT professionals surveyed are satisfied with their positions. Contributing to that sense of satisfaction is job enjoyment (for 40 percent of respondents), good pay (for 34 percent) and the ability to be creative (for 23 percent).

Also according to the survey, 88 percent of respondents would recommend their field as a career choice to others”

Let me re-do that first paragraph

“Whether you’re fighting middle-of-the-night network assaults or simply burning through brain cells trying to build a new system, IT is a job that isn’t about banker’s hours. As a career choice, it’s draining and demanding, exhaustive and exhausting.”

The fact that people would want to inflict this kind of life-style upon themselves should seem absolutely ridiculous. I work so that I can have time off from work, don’t I? I do this so I can spend time with my friends, family and work towards a better golf game, right? How on earth can 94% of those of us in this job be satisfied with the aggravation and grief that can come from long nights, frustrated customers, constant researching for something that will be obsolete in 18 months, TOPS?! The answer to these questions lies in the next line of that first paragraph, “And yet, you love it.”

I’ve met IT workers who fall into both categories; the ones who are only looking for the paycheck and the ones who REALLY love the IT field. The successful ones tend to be those that absolutely love the whole tech industry - the ones who read the magazines on tech and haven’t looked at Time or Sports Illustrated in years. The ones who subscribe to TechTV or G4. The ones that only go to Vegas because there is a server trade show on that week that “I JUST CAN’T MISS!” You know, “sickos”. 

I LOVE tech. I am excited when I get to play with a new product. I’m like a kid at Christmas when I get signed up for a Beta program. I can find joy in a NFR (Not For Resale) copy or 180 day eval copy of software. Sure, I have to read mountains of documentation weekly, deal with users who either just don’t get it or are missing the gene that allows them to be satisfied with someone’s work. Sure, stuff breaks and I’m responsible (even when I’m not). BUT, then I wrack my brain and find a solution for the problem and THAT is a good day. I provide something that modifies that missing gene for the difficult customer, put two products together and make them talk and watch the folks get some real work done.

…and I collect my modest pay, knowing I will do it again next week all over again, simply because “I love it”

Do you?

Source: CertMag.com IT as a Career Choice

November 06

Windows Server Division WebLog : Faster Eval Setup of SQL, Exchange and Windows Server

 Some things are just too cool. I have been thinking for some time that for eval purposes, it would be nice to have a pre-configured Virtual Hard Drive (vhd) that you could download and run in VPC or Virtual Server or something like that and kick the tires without having to learn how to install/config/etc the how thing. Well, apparently the chip in my brain that MS put there has a direct feed to the folks at Redmond. Have a peek at the link.

Link to Windows Server Division WebLog : Faster Eval Setup of SQL, Exchange and Windows Server

October 27

Password misery

 So as I poke around the different newsgroups. someone has posted a TechNet article that has me giggling even now. I have a password that is JUST a touch long (personally I like short passwords as it is easier for my poor brain, but pass-phrases are indeed more secure), but this is silly! After all, anything more than 10,000 characters is just WAY too hard to remember ;)

Link to Error Message: Your Password Must Be at Least 18770 Characters and Cannot Repeat Any of Your Previous 30689 Passwords

October 23

Exclusive: Microsoft Overcomes Final Vista Hurdles, Heads to RTM

while the clock is still ticking, it looks like Vista is going to make the year end release dates with the article going so far as to declare October 25th as the RTM (release to manufacturing). This will be followed up with the Office 2007 series (including the next version of SharePoint and the next version of Project Server - I am looking forward to the PPM solution there) and then the whole integration of the ProClarity suite next summer. If they keep going this route, by next winter we will have KPI dashboards and scorecards on the desktops of Vista clients running MOSS2k7! COOL! Next stop, Katmia...

Link to Exclusive: Microsoft Overcomes Final Vista Hurdles, Heads to RTM

October 17

Google Maps + Google Video + Mashup - Claude Lelouch's Rendezvous

ok, this was a cool find. Someone has combined Google Maps and a video to create in interesting breakneck tour of Paris. Have a look 

Link to Google Maps + Google Video + Mashup - Claude Lelouch's Rendezvous

TechEd 2007 little whispers

There are rumors that TechEd 2007 will be held in Orlando. This would be the same venue as TE2005 and I can say from experience that it was an awesome location for this event. I haven't been able to confirm this off of the MS site, but I trust the source I heard this from. Should be a really good event if you can make it. Start saving your pennies, I doubt I will be able to go (new job and all).

October 13

DOH! TechEd change of plans

Just last night I mentioned that TE was supposed to be in New Orleans. Today, I read this:

http://blogs.zdnet.com/microsoft/?p=36

So the venues are still up in the air. Too bad for Nauwleans.

LiveWriter week 2

so, I have been using the new blog tool for over a week now and I have now found my big beef with this new product. I will say that it has got my butt in motion and allowed me to blog more in October than I have for most of this year. On the downside, the spell checker seems to have a flaw. The single word I misspell the most is "the". But when I type in teh (my misspelling classic) and run the spollchocker, it offers to turn that into "tech". Ummmmm, NO! Of the other offers, NO "THE"! What's up with that?

Tech Blender: Branching and Merging with TFS

Scott Swigart is becoming one of my favorite bloggers. In the past few days I have found a ton of useful VSTS details on his blog and today was no exception. Scott has found a good article on the TFS Branching and Merging features. Well, it's the MSDN wiki, so it is a little dry. On the plus side, they are at least using analogies :)

Link to Tech Blender: Branching and Merging with TFS

October 12

Microsoft Tech·Ed 2007

 

I was going through some of my old comments and noticed that someone asked where TE2k7 will be back in April. I didn't know but I also didn't follow up. My apologies.

So, TechEd 2k7 in North America will be in New Orleans. I sincerely hope that New Orleans and the area will return to place it once was, but it seems that it has been slow going based on the news reports I have seen. I do recall that HP was to have a conference in New Orleans when Katrina hit and so I am glad that TE is early in the hurricane season. Hopefully, the massive amount of humanity that TechEd brings in will help to get N.O. back on the tourist type "right track".

Link to Microsoft Tech·Ed 2006

 
Photo 1 of 10