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Comment Re:bad for standards (Score 1) 194

OGG was too late. You don't just need to be open, you need to be solving problems that weren't solved years ago. MP3 was good enough. There are better replacements, but the hardware support hit the ground way before ogg or any of the alternatives were ready. People ripped all their stuff to mp3 way before the alternatives were ready.

The Vorbis/Vp8 guys don't need to be competing with h.264. That ship sailed years ago. They need to be beating the next generation of codec.

Comment Re:Blindly trusting Cisco? (Score 2) 194

If you don't trust Cisco you better get off the internet. Seriously, if you're worried about this, a binary blob running in your web browser is the least of your problems. There's a very good chance that the network hardware at your ISP is Cisco. If it's not, it will likely be Juniper.

Comment Re:bad for standards (Score 2, Insightful) 194

If the open source world releases something (unencumbered with the GPL - i.e., BSD licensed) with encoding and decoding tools that actually works as well or better than the closed alternative, in a timely manner then I'm sure people will use it.

It will never happen. Get used to it. There is far, far less complex stuff in the free desktop that has been broken for the past 20 years and still not fixed.

Comment Re:Perception of Necessity (Score 1) 265

Automating shit that can be automated so that you can actually do thing that benefit the business instead of simply maintaining the status-quo is not a bad thing. Doing automate-able drudge work when it could be automated is just stupid. Muppets who can click next through a Windows installer or run apt-get, etc. are a dime a dozen. IT staff who can get rid of that shit so they can actually help people get their own jobs done better are way more valuable.

The job of IT is to enable the business to continue to function and improve. Never forget that. People don't spend up big on computer stuff just because. They do it in order to save money by improving process. Improving process is where you should be focused, anything to do with general maintenance of the status quo is dead time.

Comment Re:Slashdot is a Bad Place to Ask This (Score 1) 265

Alternatively, perhaps somewhere up the chain they have no idea what can be done (this IT shit isn't their area of expertise), and are not being told by their IT department how to actually fix the problem properly. Rather, they are just applying band-aid after band-aid for breakage that happens.

It is my experience that if you outline the risks, the costs and the possible mitigation strategies to eliminate the risk, most sensible businesses are all ears. At the very least, if they don't agree on the spot, they are at least aware of what is possible and when the inevitable happens, be more keen to fix the problem next time.

Downtime cost adds up pretty fucking quickly. For example, my company: We have 650 PC users. pay rate probably ranges from 25 bucks an hour to 100 bucks an hour or more. Lets say the average is probably somewhere around 45 per hr.

1 hour of downtime, by 650 users, by 45 bucks per hour = $29,250 in lost productivity. Plus the embarrassment of not being able to deal with clients, etc. Plus potentially other flow on effects (e.g., in our case, possibly: maintenance scheduling for our mining equipment - trucks, drills, etc. didn't run. Plant therefore didn't get serviced properly, $500k engine dies).

If you fuck something up and are down for a day? Well... you can do the math.

Comment Re:Automate Out (Score 2) 265

This is why you move the fuck on and adapt. If your job is relying on stuff that can be done by a shell script, you need to up-skill and find another job. Because if you don't do it, someone like myself will.

And we'll be getting paid more due to being able to work at scale (same shit for 10 machines or 10,000 machines), doing less work and being much happier, doing it.

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