When you said the good old days, I thought you meant playing first person shooter games on the LAN, walking around for hours talking to the sups and managers about nonsense, going to every meeting room you could find that had food, 1.5 hour lunches, watching movies....those were the good old days.Oh man I can remember plenty of things that were better in the good ole days:
Yosemite was the log system and it didn't care about your miles or time. The log was either open or closed.
Being proactive actually paid off.
Self development time was learning whatever you wanted to learn.
You did your own troubleshooting.
Having skills.
Building your own test systems at home or at work and getting away with it.
6.5 and 80% didn't mean anything.
Yup ... that's what IT is all about. Wish we could get rid of these bags that are in charge now and actually get back to business.
Now how do ya plan to do that?
lol, only way to do that now is to quit and go somewhere that actually gives a crap about their employees instead of a bunch of numbers on a spreadsheet.
.... Or just wait until the current overlords finally get promoted elsewhere and someone with half a brain takes over.
And where would you go? And where will you find a manager at UPS with half a brain?
After the lunatics take over the asylum ....
That pretty much sums it up ....
The only reason I'm still at that toilet is because the hours let me stay in school and still be able to spend time with my family. Once I'm done with school I'll just be a cloud of smoke and a spinning chair.
If I could actually find a job that let me keep the same hours as I do now, I'd be out of there even faster.
Dfig:
Little House of Horrors? You crack me up!
Go UPS!
P71
UPS is like a giant train going down that track. It happens to have a few crappy conductors on it...but it has no effect on the train. A few passengers can't take it and jump off, never to be seen again, but the train rolls on....
Go UPS!
P71
Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good ride!
Oh man I can remember plenty of things that were better in the good ole days:
Yosemite was the log system and it didn't care about your miles or time. The log was either open or closed.
Being proactive actually paid off.
Self development time was learning whatever you wanted to learn.
You did your own troubleshooting.
Having skills.
Building your own test systems at home or at work and getting away with it.
6.5 and 80% didn't mean anything.
Nice name6.5 and 80% means nothing to any other I.T. employee in any other company in the world. This is not IT. This is made-up UPS .