TragicMonkey
Poisoned Waffles
Great. So, what's the timeline for getting this done?
- Management.
"We can knock it out this weekend, but it'll take a lot of hours of overtime pay for the whole team. I think it's worth it, though, for security."
Great. So, what's the timeline for getting this done?
- Management.
"We can knock it out this weekend, but it'll take a lot of hours of overtime pay for the whole team. I think it's worth it, though, for security."
And then you can get some of those WIBNIs and other little jobs you meant to do when you had time.
Nothing like being landed with URGENT REQUEST, starting work on it, only to discover that the parties concerned are now out of the office on PTO, "without access to email". When's it wanted, URGENTLY URGENTLY? "By end of day Monday". When do they get back? "Tuesday afternoon".
Guess who needs his questions answered before the work can be done?
Answer: the same guy who's going to be yelled at on Tuesday afternoon for not having it completed on Monday.
Me: "Hey guys you put in a user request for a new account you wanted named Doej but you already have a user named that. I need an alternative."
Client Company's HR: "Our company police is Last Name, First Initial for user name."
Me: "Yeah I get that. That's fine, a good practice actually. But you just hired a Jane Doe and you've already got an employee called Janice Doe so I can't call the new employee DoeJ as a username because it's already taken."
HR: "But we've already sent the information to a bunch of hospital portals and medical records software people to get created."
Me: "Yeah again I get that but I literally can't create two users with the same username in a Windows domain environment."
Me: "Hey guys you put in a user request for a new account you wanted named Doej but you already have a user named that. I need an alternative."
Client Company's HR: "Our company police is Last Name, First Initial for user name."
Me: "Yeah I get that. That's fine, a good practice actually. But you just hired a Jane Doe and you've already got an employee called Janice Doe so I can't call the new employee DoeJ as a username because it's already taken."
HR: "But we've already sent the information to a bunch of hospital portals and medical records software people to get created."
Me: "Yeah again I get that but I literally can't create two users with the same username in a Windows domain environment."
Try this one: "You can't get the wood for this because it's all held up in China."I got a call this morning for someone who assumed that the "expected delivery date" on his IT Equipment form represented a 100% accurate absolute guarantee of delivery at that precise date and time (never mind that the time was 12:00am). He was not impressed when I told him that we absolutely cannot guarantee delivery time because it depends on factors that are outside our control such as staffing levels, workload, and availability of stock. Apparently that was not good enough.
Wasn't nearly as bad as that call the other week, but I did give the director a heads up that they may receive some feedback.
If they have the same employee number then I would be seriously revising how much weed you are doing at lunchtime.In my department there are two people who have the same name - first name and surname - working in the same team. They have desks next to each other. Probably. That's what I'd do.
How will they know? What criteria do they use to determine you have a "new" laptop? Different PC name? Different IP?Now apparently my top-of-the-line laptop, with which I have had very few problems, is being downgraded to a worse one.![]()
It's a departmental asset. They know. They're taking my good one away from me so that they can give it to someone more important.How will they know? What criteria do they use to determine you have a "new" laptop? Different PC name? Different IP?
It's a departmental asset. They know. They're taking my good one away from me so that they can give it to someone more important.
There was a marysmith and a marysmith1 at my work. Mary Smith works in the cafeteria. Mary Smith 1 was an operating room software implementation expert. For nearly three years during the build work Mary Smith would log into her email once a week, and wonder why she had thousands of emails relating to nurse security, surgical scheduling, instrument and equipment lists, and invitations to meetings for fifty hours a week. She would reply to perhaps one in a hundred of those emails, with "who are you why are you sending me this I don't know how many lasers you need in the other hospital stop sending these" and similar.
Just yesterday I logged on to email address #6; this is an old gmail address, dating back to the 'invite only' phase that I've had for >15 years and use for personal stuff. It's not a spam bucket and I've kept it to keep in touch with people.
I find a series of emails from a large UK supermarket chain, the UK National Lottery, Apple, eBay and more notifying me about account changes.
I have no such accounts.
Some idiot, with the same name as I, in Britain has created a Gmail account as mis-entered it. Many times.
A quick look around gives me his home address, NIN, credit card numbers (2), mothers maiden name and more.