Social Problems in Enterprise Unix Administration
	
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		 "Bureaucracy is the death of any achievement." 
		-Albert Einstei 
		There is not a more honesty-enforcing device in modern life than a compiler and the attendant run-time system, 
		nor a greater intellectual joy than the art and science that can be created with it. But IT departments 
		are generally managed by people who failed programming. 
		C Wright Mills standard of leadership - "men without lively imagination are needed 
		to execute policies without imagination devised by an elite without imagination" 
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Here are my notes/reflection of sysadmin problem in strange (and typically pretty toxic) IT departments of large corporations:
	
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		 Pros: Good technology, some competent people. Benefits good but getting worse. Work from home program helpful to employees 
		(and doubtless abused by many). 
		Cons: People protecting their turf, incompetent middle managers, horde of non-technical yes men calling the shots. 
		Zero opportunities for career and professional growth inside if you're unhappy with where you are in the organization -- expect 
		friends and buddies to get hired in your place. Also expect such friends and buddies to get re-hired promptly in case they are 
		laid off. Extremely incompetent managers not encouraged to ask tough questions or indeed any questions at all, since they don't 
		have a clue about the product. 
		Summary: “Best place to work if you're an incompetent ass-kisser” 
		- Write-up about Sun Microsystems environment  
		by Member of Technical Staff in Santa Clara, CA: (Past Employee 
		- 2006)  
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Unix system administration is an interesting and complex craft. The key question for any job:  is your work demands use of your 
technical skills, creativity and judgment. If it doesn't, then you're in absurd world of Dilbertized cubicle farms. Or worse,  
in the middle of outsourcing/offshoring campaign.  The answer for system administration is yes, it can be a good occupation for 
capable, creative people,  but with caveats ;-). 
Unix system administration has potential of utilizing creativity, judgment and tech skills, but they don't materialize automatically. 
Many sysadmin feel overworked, underappreciated and underpaid. In large firms widespread feeling is that IT bosses are either incompetent 
or cheating those who are in the trenches or both.  Users are also pretty resentful and generally passionately hate corporate IT.  
Excesses of IT bureaucracy stimulates rise of 
Shadow IT which is essences is an attempt 
to create alternative IT solutions using own non-supported by central IT software  products (often open source) and "stealth" support 
personnel. 
Stories about bureaucratization horrors are widespread and that generally suggest the aging of most IT organizations. Often such 
stories depict remarkable exercises in absurdity that look like taken directly from the pages of  famous
The Good Soldier Švejk  stories about military bureaucracy (which BTW is probably a better book for treatment of sysadmin abuse 
then Alice in Wonderland ;-)  Much depends on particular work climate.  
Still it is fair to say that over the last ten years things have got a lot worse for the IT "worker bees". Among typical problems: 
	- Management often lacks any real IT skills. Typical mid-level IT managers have skills limited to email and MS Office. 
 
	- The unrealistic expectations and schedules are common and can be pushed down to the department or individual level by clueless 
	or cruel bosses.  Mismatch between realistic and proposed time schedules can be ten times or more.  In case of failure 
	the scapegoat is chosen and punished no matter whether he is really responsible or whether he tried to warn about difficulties.  
	More often failure is declared to be success and no realistic information go up the ladder. Few rewards travel back down either.
	
 
	- Feudal organization and borders between kingdoms create vacuum of information and vital information can be deliberately hidden 
	from people participating in the project creating lose-lose situations. Turf wars are common. 
 
In worst case you will feel like a mercenary who is fighting in a bloody, dirty, exhausting conflict he does not understand, with 
commanding officers who have little or no brains, on behalf of a country to which he has no loyalty. If you are just out of the university 
one of the most important parts of your adaptation to such an environment is not learning technical staff (you will be surprised how 
little some long time members of staff know), it is adapting to the situation and finding your niche without losing your dignity and 
making too many compromises. Adapting to the situation when many of the people in IT managerial positions (I refuse to call them "managers") 
are clueless, empire-building, turf-protecting bureaucrats interested mainly in self-promotion and self-protection,  regardless 
of the consequences to their subordinates.  Reading books like 
Peter Principle 
helps a little, but reality is much more dangerous and people can be much more evil.
Without Conscience might help too, but it's too simplistic.  One of the real problems we have in IT departments is that they 
turns intelligent adults who graduated from the universities with pretty high score and were genially interested in programming and 
IT into morons. Here are a couple of insightful comments from 
Why I left 
Google - JW on Tech - Site Home - MSDN Blogs
	Ian Smith
	
		Isn't it inevitable that Google will end up like Microsoft. A brain-dead dinosaur employing sycophantic 
		middle class bores, who are simply working towards a safe haven of retirement. ...
	
	ram 
	
	
		This was exactly how I felt that Google has become under Larry Page. I was surprised that the community wasn't discussing 
		more about this . 
		It is becoming more like any other company. Google was supposed to be the ideal shining beacon in the tech world. With Google 
		becoming just another corporate company, I think the tech landscape will become more like that of 
		the network carriers. Neither of the them are good but people adjust to what is available,
	
In view of unending stream of more and more complex systems that sysadmin needs to manage we need to to promote KISS principle. Design 
is measured not by quantity, but by quality. That's were Unix traditions come into play, but recently they were distorted by competition 
with Microsoft, which in a way is "The king of software overcomplexity", the company which stripped IBM from this title (although IBM 
still desperately fights for the title as we can see in Tivoli, WebSphere, Lotus Notes and several other products ;-).  
Fight against overcomplexity is related to fight against overload. There is an optimal amount of time and effort spend on the job. 
And that optimum is different from maximum :-). Killing yourself for some stupid project that in ten years will be in the dustbin of 
history (even if it does enjoy initial success) is probably not the optimum form of self-sacrifice, even if you inclined to such a destiny. 
This is the point that is difficult to understand when you are young and enthusiastic so it might be more easily explained in the form 
of humor; for that purpose we created 
Softpanorama IT Slackers Society with 
its own 
manifest and
Ten 
Commandments.  The key point here is that excessive zeal is more dangerous and self-destructive then you might think... 
	
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		P:
			Vonbek777 wrote:  
			
				That night I dreamed a surreal Dilbert type revolution where oppressed cubical workers everywhere rose up and 
				pitched workstations out windows, torched the server rooms, danced on the backup tapes in the streets, and bowled mid-level 
				managers strapped to fake leather office chairs into vending machines and stacks of office water bottles, the big ones.
				 
			 
			Perhaps you should seek professional help :-) 
		 
		Vonbek777: 
		
			JP wrote:  
			
				Perhaps you should seek professional help.  
			 
			Are you suggesting that isn't a normal fantasy for frustrated IT people everywhere? 
		 
		
		Advance Report- 
		Real Annualized GDP Grew at 3.2% in Q4 
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The absurdities of Dilbertized cubicle farms are well known, but any write-up is nothing in comparison with your actual experience 
of joining and working in such an organization. Students entering large firms should be aware that in such an environment system administrators 
are usually expected to fit the organization as a cog, not as a craftsman. Too detailed requirements of "experience" in particular non-essential 
or obscure tools in resume is just one facet of this "cog" approach as if a person who graduated from the college cannot master them 
quickly enough.  Here is a humorous take on a typical situation:
	I’ve been asked to compile some Dilbert advice for new IT graduates who have no idea what’s awaiting them in the IT world. I’m talking 
	about practical advice. Here are some of the ones that come to mind.
		- Don't be surprised during the first month on a new IT job to hear about the “idiot who had the job before you.”
 
		- Success in IT is mostly about waiting for something lucky to happen and then taking credit.
 
		- The person who sits nearest the boss’s office gets the most assignments.
 
		- Preparing a PowerPoint presentation for your boss is what is often called productivity.
 
		- Your hard work will be rewarded. Specifically, your boss’s boss will reward your boss for making you work so hard.
 
		- Non-monetary incentives are every bit as valuable as they sound.
 
		- There’s no such thing as good ideas and bad ideas. There are only your own ideas and other people’s. If you want someone 
		to like your idea, tell him he said it last week and you just remembered.
 
		- Teamwork is what you call it when you trick other people into ignoring their priorities in favor of yours.
 
		- The term "leadership" in It is just a politically correct term for blatant coercion.  No one needs to lead you to do 
		something that is obviously good for you.
 
		- You can estimate the time for any project by guessing how many weeks it will take you to accomplish and then multiplying 
		the sum of the number of managers and idiots involved in the project by this number and subtracting from the result  the 
		number of capable co-workers multiplied by two. 
 
		- It is better to be an “IT expert” than it is to do actual work.
 
	
The whole mentality is pretty much feudal with separate  
lords (aka managers) guarding their kingdoms (and number of serfs, aka staff  positions) and God forbid you to make some proposal 
that cross the line. Usually there  are way too many shallow PowerPoint B.S artists who rose up the ranks far above their level 
of competence. But there is a silver lining in any dark cloud: often you can get along pretty well doing very little useful (or at all) 
as long as you fall inline. That creates plenty of opportunities for self-education as well as to contribute to open source (preferably 
under pseudonym).   In this sense large organizations are superior work environment that small firms when each person contribution 
is critical to normal functioning of the infrastructure and you need to run like crazy just to stay on the same place. 
"Organization induced idiocy" is another term that explains a lot of what is happening on IT floors of large companies. As 
organization grows and matures changes in behavior similar to aging in humans became more and more pronounced. One is risk aversion 
and it starts at the very top. Size makes the IT  datacenters rigid and innovations hostile. Quantity turns into quality. Larger 
IT organizations also  are more susceptible to "strong ruler" trap. I think this is a situation somewhat similar to totalitarian 
states dynamics. The society is simply captured until the crash of the regime occurs. Dictators can be very efficient at the beginning 
and solve problems quicker and more comprehensively then any democratic states, but the problems always arise as the regime ages.
Bureaucracies often  trivialize important matters (e.g., those affecting the reliability 
of network or servers or other "life and death" issues), and grossly exaggerate the importance of trivial 
matters (e.g., PowerPoint presentations to management). Sane people can and do behave  insanely in their bureaucratic 
roles. That is a special term for this, something like "acquired  stupidity". As authors of
Peter Principle suggested the most detailed analysis are performed for orders 
around $1-10K. Projects around $1 million which typically introduce new large software or hardware system into environment often are 
reviewed extremely superficially with most decision-making at the top. Solutions are often are granted without any detailed technical analysis 
at all. In many instances such books as 
Peter Principle are simply too true 
to be funny. There's hardly anything in them that didn't sound exactly like real IT environment to me. And a typical reaction to the 
various absurd incidents of bureaucratic inertia, institutional insanity, and blatant higher-up incompetence depicted in the book was 
a simple shrug. All-in-all life in IT can be as repetitive, irritating, absurd as in Catch-22, and bad things happen for no rhyme or 
reason. The only thing that is absent is the danger of death. 
In the large enterprise workspace every sysadmin has periodically to deal with absurd mission statements, objectives  and benchmark 
standards, working towards pre-agreed goals of teamwork (which often means the necessary of being a the conformist). It's important 
to understand that what they require is surface obedience and if you are comfortable with this mask, you have substantial degree of 
freedom. So that atmosphere would not necessary be bad for and drive the creative, intelligent, free-spirited guys out. It just required 
diplomatic skills and ability to deflect the mot absurd requirements.  Because paradoxically excessive regimentation is often accompanies 
by complete loss of understanding of what those who are in the trenches are actually doing. If so, the situation  represents a 
huge opportunity.
All those campaigns  for 99.9% uptime, increased "customer satisfaction" and, especially, "increase shareholder value" whatever 
it means (the latter usually means brainless cost cutting and utter destruction of quality and/or safety to please investment banks 
and get bonuses for the top brass) should be approached as bad weather. It will change, probably soon. Such campaigns tend to self-destruct 
and results of resulting destruction quietly swiped under the carpet.   Still side effects linger for quite a long time and 
the most important side effect that more and more rank and file staffers realize that management is incompetent and care only about 
themselves. 
Due to those limitations you can often see that amazing group of talented people can perform poorly. When the leaders are all incompetent, 
you just wanted out. Demoralization kicks in and from that point things are going downhill... 
Performance review is a special case of company trying to pressure people into conformance which needs a separate discussion. First 
of it is important to understand that performance reviews are not about your performance. It's more about your contribution to your 
boss performance and you being perceived as a conformist ("a good team player" in corporate jargon).  It is also example of raw 
and almost unchecked power projected by the manager: a powerful way to keep employees in check.  If your manager wants to 
say that you are bad performer, he/she can do it. That makes performance reviews pretty
Kafkaesque experience, especially for new sysadmins. 
	"[Kafkaesque] would be an existentialist state of ever-elusive freedom while existing under immitigable control...anything suggestive 
	of Kafka, especially his nightmarish style of narration, in 
	which characters lack a clear course of action, the ability to see beyond immediate events, and the possibility of escape." 
	
In reality performance reviews serve as a powerful tool to kill employee morale: people who know that they will not 
receive a reward for completing a task or for doing that task successfully simply do not perform as well as those who expect no 
reward at all. Also humiliating nature of performance reviews leaves scars that are slow to heal. There are couple of things that can 
make performance reviews less distasteful: 
	- Keep your mouth shut (and that include counterattacking the manager, the typical blunder novice sysadmin do). Consider 
	it as a one year session of instructional humiliation for behaving correctly on which you most probably can collect rent another 
	year. 
 
	- Operate strictly with facts. Never offer any opinion nether about the manager or your colleagues.  One of the worst 
	errors is starting to compare your performance with one of your colleagues. First nobody care about your opinion and second your 
	evaluation can be communicated to this particular colleague in pretty nasty, exaggerated way.  So you better forget about it.  
	Like Romans used to to say, while gladiators fight together on the arena, each of them need to die alone. 
 
	- Don't trust, don't be afraid, don't beg .  There are much worse misfortunes then being subjected to a performance 
	review (read
	
	The Gulag Archipelago ;-).  Gallows humor   
	can help but only in moderation. It is argued that gallows humor often occurs in situation were actors have limited means of expressing 
	discontent and it can provide an outlet for airing subjects which people may feel is safer than open dialogue.
 
Performance reviews are often structured according some internal company document which probably is close to published junk, for 
example Harvard Business School recommendation, and if you can get hold of those guidelines you pretty much can simulate what they want 
from you with minimal hassle.  If you don't you can but a generic book. They are often $0.01 on Amazon which is their real price 
:-).  Usage of bureaucratic jargon and obfuscation is the rule of the game. Try to learn the necessary bureaucratic jargon ;-).  
For example "team players" usually means a person who sucks to his boss and often is used to crush any resistance to stupid projects 
or outsourcing initiatives.  All-in-all  the performance review is not a review, but a verdict read to you by the judge. The 
key is to try to minimize  psychological damage and first of all damage to self-esteem
To fight them you better study literature. For a start look at  
For some additional information see
Mini-Microsoft- FAQ on reviews, 
promotions, job changes, and ...
Like any politics office politics is about struggle for power. It is attempt to create alliances that help you to survive and prosper 
in the company and as such it is a parallel path distinct from purely technocratic activities. And it requires different abilities. 
Played reasonably well (and that first of all means "not too much zeal" ;-)  it can help you to survive and even advance career 
wise.  The problem with IT politics is that they are usually highly territorial, and as such petty, gossipy,  sociopathic 
and stifling for any real creativity. 
You may not like it but please avoid criticizing such a behavior. all this water cooler discussion create an  informal power 
network that somewhat compensates utter powerlessness of staff in large corporations and if you need at least stay neutral if you want 
to benefit form it. You need to take into account its existence: many valuable initiatives proposed by new members of IT staff are killed 
simply because they are not liked by power brokers in informal alliances.  Just like in politics. decision-making can get plagued 
by indecisiveness, gridlock, incompetence and  compromises between power brokers that really are not helpful for anyone.  
Attempts for power grab are not uncommon:
	
	BrokenHalo:
	Re:Too many cooks... 
	
		... Back in the '90s, I worked at one outfit (an insurance company) where the vice-CEO demanded superuser privileges despite 
		having no knowledge of system administration or any other computing background. He just wanted to act as overlord as to what 
		staff had access to on their signons. I was very tempted to tell him to get f*ked, phrased in more professional terms...
		My immediate boss was (wisely) more inclined to a diplomatic approach, however, so he persuaded me to install a dummy shell 
		for him that was enough to convince him that he had what he wanted, without granting him any kind of command line access, or 
		ability to change system configuration.
	
In a typical large corporate IT environment, there is a strict hierarchy in which managers and the top sysadmin earn much more than 
those at the bottom. In order to rise in this hierarchy one needs to be considered successful. Along with technical skills, social connections 
and people skills also are necessary and sometimes more important. Still often for an internal promotion you often need putting in years 
of  appreciated by management (but not necessary useful ;-) effort for which you get good performance reviews.  No wonder 
that many sysadmin prefer to jump the ship in order to get a promotion. You usually get the necessary qualification for higher position 
in other firm after two to three years on the job. Remember that changing companies too often slows your growth as a lot of effort need 
to be spend adapting to a new environment. That's an overhead that slows your growth. 
At some point the next step may be joining management ranks. An important factor to understand that usually it's not easy to get 
back to system administration, even if one wants to: the loss of qualifications for the person promoted to the management is occurring 
really fast. This way IT is a natural environment for generating PHBs and they are much less benign then in Dilbert cartoons. 
Sometimes despite general attitude toward initiatives there can be some similarities between the way small or medium datacenters 
and large datacenters operated when a big contract is in play. In such cases even a relatively junior person might have an influence 
on the bottom line of IT far beyond what the title suggests. You will be surprised to know how superficial evaluations of the most expensive 
parts of large corporate IT infrastructure: storage, databases and enterprise management software are in large companies. PHBs often 
are clueless as for real technical merits of the product and if they do not have personal preference some lower ranking person can easily 
determine the final result of the bidding. Higher ranks of  IT departments are often staffed with people dumped from other parts 
of organization and more often than now such people are notoriously poor managers.
But cases when lower ranked person has real influence of an choice of the system that datacenter will run are rare. The reality is 
that managers often do not need your advice and  a typical manager as an individual makes more money – and hence acquires higher 
status – the more complex and more expensive product the company acquires.  Often decisions to acquire the particular product are 
made at the top level of IT management and your opinion, even if you express one, will never influence the decision making (that's how 
many IBM products lend in large corporations).  Please understand that sometimes complex, obscure product will make your position 
more secure.  Be ready that as individual administrator you can experience some conflict of interests, especially acute if you 
prefer simpler more open products and participate in open source movement.  
The other problem is that most IT departments those days are pinching pennies. I’ve worked for quite a few IT departments that were 
“penny wise and pound foolish” even before the current economic crisis.  The first thing they achieve is killing employee moral 
by micromanaging. 
It is important to understand that there is a big difference between being cheap and being frugal. Example of frugal is learning 
to cook good meals at home and eating at restaurants only on  special occasions. An example of being cheap is eating out twice 
every weekend and stiffing the waiter on every occasion.  IT now is a shrinking business and that shows not only is spectrum of 
cheapness-frugality decisions (with prevalence of the former) but also in a types of bosses that you will encounter, types which  
previously used to be found in department stores ;-). The utter short-sightedness in such IT departments, both public and private can 
be quite breathtaking for a newcomer. For example they can buy $20K Itanium server to run HP-UX when $5K Intel server with Linux or 
Solaris would be twice faster and 4 times cheaper and refuse to send you to a 4K training in the name of frugality. But this not frugal, 
that's simply cheap.  No matter how cynical you get, it’s impossible to keep up with stupidity of such examples.   Extreme, 
stupid, self-defeating cheapness can also be a distinct behavioral characteristic for some IT managers especially those without good 
tech background and who very slowly grow in their ranks in the company. For this type of people any type of waste is painful and any 
type of thrift and efficiency is pleasurable – regardless of rational cost/benefit analysis. There are also many managers who ideologically 
enjoy the flexing of power for its own sake (basically, bullies) that use frugality just as an excuse to exercise power.  IT in 
it’s core should  be driven by engineering and that means an open, flat, non-hierarchical kind of place with opportunities for 
training. If they don't provide that try to do it yourself and prepare to leave. At the end of the day, it is the ability to move to 
other company or the ability to successfully start a competitive company that constitutes  a decisive test whether or not you are 
mistreated in the current environment.  Remember that after 3-4 years you value is usually higher at the new company, then in old 
one, especially if you paid sufficient attention to raising your qualification.  Leaving company that provides "stupidly cheap" 
environment  is a small revenge, but it is still a revenge for mistreatment.  Here is one interesting comment: 
	I used to work for a company tried to have it both ways on this issue. 
	
		- They wanted you to work more hours, because “that’s what we need to do for the company.” 
 
		- When benefits are got cut back they said, “that’s what is going on in the market.” 
 
	
	They wanted to be cheap with the money, but they wanted you to be generous with your time.
	Capitalism is a two way street. If companies want to be cheap with money, they can’t expect to have their cake and eat it too. 
	That only generates resentment from employees. It’s counterproductive to lecture people on values like 
	hard work and loyalty, while you forget the virtue of generosity.
Some "stupidly cheap" companies provide ample opportunities for self-training.  I think that good IT department can’t afford 
to not spend money on things that really matters, like good desktops/laptops, medical insurance, tools and training, but it's OK if 
they avoid spending money on things that don’t matter, such as discounted tickets, club memberships, reserved packing spaces, internet 
feed at home and so on. If they do that, great; but in those non-essential matters if they don't, that's OK. 
Just don't react too  emotionally on some incidents  in which your advice is ignored, decision that was made looks to you 
completely stupid and /or you feed that your contributions are ignored.  This issue is related to millennium old  philosophical 
issue: What is justice? It would be nice if everyone (and especially you ;-) is compensated a fair share of the value he/she creates. 
The problem is that such environment in impossible to create and maintain. There is always a lot of subjectivity in measuring somebody's 
contribution in IT.  That means that the idea to reward top performers with a bigger slice in practice, rarely work out that way. 
For the same reason "performance evaluations" in IT are usually a disaster. One reason is that few bosses can/want objectively evaluate 
qualification of their staff. What should matters for you is the general climate.  
Also you need to develop the ability to see the consequences of decisions in a long run. That's a real crucial ability for survival 
in modern IT. Please understand that often the adoption of the system that looks to you stupid and expensive proves to be not so stupid/expensive 
in a long run due to factors that you don't understand at the time of evaluation. And if this "stupid and expensive" system is an industry 
standard it provides you a valuable opportunity for training. Long term consequences is really critical framework of judging decision 
and future is unpredictable by definition. After all the useful life of IT systems is usually a decade of less and all of us are like 
the artists who create complex paintings on the beach sand. The next big wave and all is gone. In such cases your current fight, say,  
to promote particular (and definitely better) software package might be not that essential if in two years this area is outsourced.
I think the most realistic way to preserver sanity in a large corporate IT environment is relentless work on improving you technical 
qualification. Please don't think that after graduation from the university you should stop study. That's the biggest mistake you can 
make.  Unix is a very interesting OS, the OS that actually has a philosophy behind it. Simplifying we can say that Unix favor rapid 
prototyping and pipes as component structuring mechanism. Learning it and how to apply it in one of the important tasks for each Unix 
sysadmin.  I mention some features of it in my (generally negative) 2004 review of Peter Salus book A Quarter Century of UNIX 
(Addison-Wesley, 1994)
	In my humble opinion Salus lucks real understanding of the technical and social dynamics of Unix development, understanding that 
	can be found, say, in chapter "Twenty Years of Berkeley Unix from AT&T-Owned to Freely Redistributable" in the book "Open Sources: 
	Voices from the Open Source Revolution (O'Reilly, 1999)" (available online). The extended version of this chapter will be published 
	in the second edition of "The Design and Implementation of the 4.4BSD Operating System (Unix and Open Systems Series)" which I highly 
	recommend (I read a preprint at Usenix.)
	In any case Kirk McKusick is a real insider, not a former Usenix bureaucrat like Salus. Salus was definitely close to the center 
	of the events; but it is unclear to what extent he understood the events he was close to. 
	Unix history is a very interesting example how interests of military (DAPRA) shape modern technical projects (not always to the 
	detriment of technical quality, quite opposite in case of Unix) and how DAPRA investment in Unix created completely unforeseen side 
	effect: BSD Unix that later became the first free/open Unix ever (Net2 tape and then Free/Open/NetBSD distributions). Another interesting 
	side of Unix history is that AT&T brass never understood what a jewel they have in hands. 
	Salus's Usenix position prevented him from touching many bitter conflicts that litter the first 25 years of Unix, including personal 
	conflicts. The reader should be advised that the book represents "official" version of history, and that Salus is, in essence, a 
	court historian, a person whose main task is to put gloss on the events, he is writing about. As far as I understand, Salus never 
	strays from this very safe position. 
	Actually Unix created a new style of computing, a new way of thinking of how to attack a problem 
	with a computer. This style was essentially the first successful component model in programming. As Frederick P. 
	Brooks Jr (another computer pioneer who early recognized the importance of pipes) noted, the creators of Unix "...attacked the accidental 
	difficulties that result from using individual programs together, by providing integrated libraries, unified file formats, and pipes 
	and filters.". As a non-programmer, in no way Salus is in the position to touch this important side of Unix. The book contains standard 
	and trivial praise for pipes, without understanding of full scope and limitations of this component programming model...
An interesting reading on the topic will be contrasting
The Unix Hater's Handbook (available 
online) and Don Libes 
Life With Unix. Both books 
explore Unix history and its philosophy from different angles.  Here is a good summary of principles that constitute Unix philosophy 
from Wikipedia: 
	McIlroy: A Quarter Century of Unix
	
		Doug McIlroy, the inventor of
		Unix pipes and one of the founders of the 
		Unix tradition, summarized the philosophy as follows: 
		
			This is the Unix philosophy: Write programs 
			that do one thing and do it well. Write programs to work together. Write programs to handle
			text streams, because that is a universal 
			interface.
		This is usually abridged to "Write programs that do one thing and do it well".
	
	Pike: Notes on Programming in C
	
		Rob Pike offers the following five maxims of complexity 
		in programming in Notes on Programming 
		in C,[2] though they can be easily viewed as points of a Unix 
		philosophy:[citation 
		needed]
		
			- You cannot tell where a program is going to spend its time. Bottlenecks occur in surprising places, so do not try to 
			second guess and put in a speed hack until you've proven that's where the bottleneck is.
 
			- Measure. Do not tune for speed until your
			performance analysis tool tells 
			you which part of the code overwhelms the rest.
 
			- Fancy algorithms tend to run more slowly on small 
			data sets than simple algorithms. They tend to have a large constant factor in
			O(n) analysis, and n is usually 
			small. So don't get fancy unless Rule 2 indicates that n is big enough.
 
			- Simplify your algorithms and data structures 
			wherever it makes sense because fancy algorithms are more difficult to implement without
			defects. The data structures in most programs 
			can be built from array lists,
			linked lists,
			hash tables, and
			binary trees.
 
			- Data dominates. If you have chosen the right data structures and organized things well, the algorithms will almost always 
			be self-evident. Data structures, not algorithms, are central to programming.
 
		
		Pike's rules 1 and 2 restate Donald Knuth's[3] 
		famous maxim "Premature
		optimization 
		is the root of all evil."
		Ken Thompson 
		rephrased Pike's rules 3 and 4 as "When in doubt, use
		brute force." Rules 3 and 4 are instances 
		of the design philosophy KISS. Rule 5 was previously 
		stated by Fred Brooks in 
		The Mythical Man-Month.
		Jon Bentley's 
		Programming Pearls also has a chapter 
		on the same design principle. Rule 5 is often shortened to "write stupid code that uses smart data", and is an instance of the 
		guideline "If your data structures are good enough, the algorithm to manipulate them should be trivial."
	
	Mike Gancarz: The UNIX Philosophy
	
		In 1994
		
		Mike Gancarz (a member of the team that designed the
		X Window System), drew on his own experience 
		with Unix, as well as discussions with fellow programmers and people in other fields who depended on Unix, to produce The 
		UNIX Philosophy which sums it up in 9 paramount precepts:
		
			- Small is beautiful.
 
			- Make each program do one thing well.
 
			- Build a prototype as soon as possible.
 
			- Choose portability over efficiency.
 
			- Store data in flat text files.
 
			- Use software leverage to your advantage.
 
			- Use shell scripts to increase leverage 
			and portability.
 
			- Avoid captive user interfaces.
 
			- Make every program a filter.
 
		
		The 10 lesser tenets are not universally agreed upon as part of the Unix philosophy and, in some cases, are hotly debated 
		such as
		
		Monolithic Kernels vs. Microkernels:
		
			- Allow the user to tailor the environment.
 
			- Make operating system kernels small and lightweight.
 
			- Use lowercase and keep it short.
 
			- Save trees.
 
			- Silence is golden.
 
			- Think parallel.
 
			- The sum of the parts is greater than the whole.
 
			- Look for the 90-percent solution.
 
			- Worse is better.
 
			- Think hierarchically.
 
		
	
	Worse is better
	
		Main article: Worse is better
		Richard P. Gabriel suggests that a 
		key advantage of Unix was that it embodied a design philosophy he termed "worse is better", in which simplicity of both the 
		interface and the implementation are more important than any other attribute of the system—including correctness, consistency 
		and completeness. Gabriel argues that this design style has key evolutionary advantages, though he questions the quality of 
		some results.
	
Some issues are also covered in my article 
Solaris vs Linux
As for raising your qualification, Malcolm Gladwell, the author of the book
Outliers
 suggested an interesting hypothesis that 10,000 hours of study/experience as a young man/woman is a prerequisite for getting 
to the high level in almost any field. Roughly speaking that's just 1K day 10 hours a day or approximately three year. While you can 
take this with a grain of salt, I would agree with the thesis that opportunity and persistence in IT matters as much  as high IQ(or 
even more).  We can disagree about numbers (I think for sysadmin job his estimate is too low estimate and 20,000-30,000 hours  
are required to achieve high level of qualification) we agree about the principle. And this is far from being some a new idea as proverb 
"practice makes perfect" suggests. 
But there is important thing about Gladwell view. He suggests that the most successful people put first ten thousand of hours in 
a relatively young age, resulting in early head start.  That's why long hours, including working summer hours in school, fanatic 
dedication are really important.  That's what I tried for many years communicate to my students: if you want to be at the top (and 
not everybody wants that) you need work long, long hours to get a head start so that after university you can get better position. The 
weakness of such recommendation is that IT includes substantial social component and this component is not easily teachable, but can 
make or brake person career similarly to presence of absence  of programming abilities. 
In "Outliers," Gladwell shows  how individuals who relentlessly work on improving their skills from young age, even if they 
have a humble start rise to prominence in their respective careers. There are also important external factors involved and the top achieved 
depends of arriving on the scene at the right time and on the ability to leverage relationships. As for timing it does not depends on 
you and here you need to be lucky like Bill Gates was. Also not everybody can leverage relationships (especially if born in a distant 
country and in family of modest means). Still relentless work in mastering the craft pays and the saying "practice makes perfect"  
is very true in programming and system administration.  I often saw how students less able then top in the class achieved more 
due to being really fanatical in self-education after graduation.  In this sense having real interest in programming or system 
administration helps. 
In a normal career, that level of commitment usually lead to achieving really high level of qualification in  six-ten years, 
but in some high intensity environments like game programming that "path to the top" can be crammed into 3–5 years.  Unfortunately 
this is not the case for Unix system administration. Unless you are a former programmer, getting to the mature level required quite 
a lot of work that can't be compressed in less then, say, 7-10 years. The problem is that with time Unixes become way more complex then 
they were in early 1990th and the services that they are running, for example LAMP stack, also became complex.  Virtualization 
also added complexity. With liberal access to vendor training (say four courses a year or more) it can be done faster, but still it's 
a lot of work that requires a lot of time. 
In any case, there is a lot of  deep elegance in Unix, and a talented sysadmin like any talented craftsman is able to expose 
this hidden beauty of the masterful manipulation with complex symbolic objects  to the amazed observers. That part of sysadmin 
craft is often called the art of command line  Also you need to improvise on the job to get things done, create your own tools; 
you can't go just "by manual".  Unfortunately sometimes such an improvisation might have an
unexpected side effect ;-). Feelings after, say, wiping
/etc directory of an important production server in the middle of the day can be quite 
intense...  
Unix system administration are one of the last few truly multifunctional specializations in IT. It involves a lot of problem solving. 
My feeling is that programmers that were in the early day kings of IT, became too narrow specialized and system administration remains 
one of the few truly "encyclopedic" occupations.  Java programmers, for example,  seldom know Perl, bash, Sendmail, bind and 
apache. But good system administrators usually knows a lot about those areas in additional to substantial skills in programming (many 
Unix utilities were written by people who were employed as sysadmins, not as programmers). 
In any case if you want to work as a system administrator, you need to know how to do installing a server, add and extend filesystem 
and so on. Entry level knowledge of shell is also required. On the second level you need to know scripting more in depth with at least 
shell (bash)  and Perl under the belt. As Java became modern Cobol, some knowledge of Java is also required. In additional databases 
became such an essential part of business datacenter that their knowledge is necessary even if database administrators exist in the 
organization. Bu first and foremost sysadmin needs to know how to troubleshoot the problems if something goes wrong.  
Watching how a Unix guru performs routine sysadmin tasks using command line tools often can teach you a lot more that you learned 
in particular shell programming class (including mine ;-).  Sometimes it's like watching professional piano player performing some 
classical piece. The current trend of downsizing of IT means that many "old school" system administrators with unmatched skills of command 
line usage are vanishing from IT and with them some important class of knowledge disappears. Please note that those people have a unique 
experience as they grow with the growth of Unix, often from the very humble beginnings on DEC machines. Some came to Unix administration 
from mainframes, as Unix was the OS that by-and-large replaced mainframes in datacenters in 90th. Knowing history is always important 
and that's how this generation acquired a unique perspective.  If you know such a person try to learn from him/her as this type 
of knowledge is rather difficult to acquire on your own. 
On the surface, IT is an agreeable, non-confrontational place where sociability and networking are crucial. But under this surface there 
are often mean or sociopathic bosses absurd requirements and tight schedules and unpaid overtime. While elements of creativity are still 
present in modern sysadmin work, it is now much less craft and more a "regular job" - with all its unfairness and compromises.
That's why many sysadmins consider the profession to be quite stressful. Commonly cited sources of stress include having to deal 
with difficult users, difficult coworkers. But the main danger is psychopathic bosses -- the type of people who advance really well 
in a typical large corporate IT environment. Add to this stupidly designed, overly complex and often useless or harmful products that 
were bought by clueless PHBs out of plain vanilla stupidity or due to bribing by small perks like golf trips or couple of conferences 
in a really nice places. The responsibility for supporting brain damaged products with the parody on customer service instead of real 
tech support is probably far from what typical graduate thought about the workplace at the university. 
Psychopathic managers came in several different flavors, each of which is richly represented 
in IT workplace.  The classic types are: 
In such cases, which are more typical then most people outside of IT assume, the important thing is to learn to tread the fine line 
between self-interested cooperation and psychological surrender. Another important point is to strive to achieve mastery of the sysadmin 
craft, which in turn gives you a degree of freedom and an alternative self-worth scale, the scale that is not a subject to the whims 
of office politics. 
Craftsman has inherent pride in this ability "to fix things", not just shuffle emails and call vendor tech support.  In this 
sense as long as sysadmin can at least partially be craftsman and exercise its own creativity, he/she is less susceptible to the depression 
inherent in the "office slave" positions and labor alienation syndrome of modem organizations.  The absurdities and injustices 
of the modern office are not immediately obvious but that does not mean that they are less demeaning, especially for talented young 
people out of college.  But in a way modern colleges prepares people well for such things, especially for office hypocrisy ;-).
Heavy doze of mismanagement leads to the alienating of system administrators, who start to hate their job (some times with strong 
negative passion, see Bastard Operator From Hell ) 
During weekends and holidays it's refreshing to not have to worry about your job. Unless you work in IT. Along with being on call, 
all the "server room monkeys"  do suffer from anxiety about their jobs being outsourced. Outsourcing remains fashionable 
and like Sword of Damocles hangs over any sysadmin head.
The level at which Unix sysadmin jobs were targeted by outsourcing is still pretty low, much less then programming jobs. But "the 
value of the sword is not that it fall, but rather, that it hangs" and threat of outsourcing is a powerful way to keep sysadmins in 
check in large companies. But prerequisites for outsourcing are in place: high speed connections to India, East Asia and Eastern Europe 
make corporate brass eager to consider saving money on sysadmin jobs.  
A powerful countervailing fact is that IT is already downsized and often total cost of IT including salaries is less the 1% of total 
expenses for a particular organization. So gains are small and risks are high. In an way this is another penny wide pound foolish approach.  
See The incredible disappearing 
sysadmin. 
Another countervailing factor is that outsourcing sysadmin jobs is more difficult and problems prone path then most PHBs (and not 
only PHBs) assume. See
Outsourcing and the reduction of the absolute numbers of workers due to more automation in Unix administration has powerful 
negative side effects that weakens organization as a whole. Technology is not neutral or independent of who controls it and in way IT 
is the nerve system of the company. Do you really want to outsource your nerve system?  
Still, while degradation of quality sysadmin work environment is less and more slow then say degradation of corporate 
programming jobs it is still pretty visible. Conflicts are common and can be pretty nasty (see for example typical management speak 
in
Learn to resolve and avoid work conflicts ).
Still, there will always be demand for good Unix sysadmins. You can only do so much from 3000 miles away. Try coordinating 
something really complex with somebody in another country. The effects of destruction of  loyalty to the company are also huge.  
If one is paid $15 an hour for a job that is paid $30 an hour elsewhere (the U.S. systems administrators make an average of $29 per 
hour.) why should one stay with the current company after acquiring (often at large expense) the necessary skills. 
And absence of loyalty cost company money, sometimes much more than can be saved by outsourcing. I know several example 
when people who are about to be outsourced just avoided to provide their opinion about the particular (expensive) system and as a result 
company bought and deployed an expensive lemon which later took several years and several million dollars to replace. Sometimes such 
decision bring the company on the edge of disaster.    
The classic idea of increasing productivity was that the labor that is freed up due to increased productivity will be used to produce 
new goods and services thereby increasing the quantity and variety of the nation's output. In a dynamic, growing economy, even though 
there's a delay before the new jobs appear (and hence a need to help workers through the transition), the new jobs are supposed to be 
even better than the old ones. 
But as IT workers look forward, the fear is that that won't be the case. Sysadmins who have lost jobs face an uncertain future where, 
if they can get new jobs at all, they are unlikely be paid that well as in the past jobs or have the same level of benefits as the jobs 
they lost. New hires do not appear to have the same opportunities that those who were hired in, say 90th used to have, particularly 
sysadmins with just bachelor degree.  In a way bachelor degree became more like high school diploma in 1990th. 
While previously workers could be assured that rising productivity would translate into better jobs, the last several decades of 
stagnant wages have undermined that promise. The brass still can pick up productivity-enhancing ideas from the rank and file workers, 
but reward only themselves with higher pay and perks as profits rise. That situation is often called "new normal" for IT.  The 
current theme seems to be:
	"We are going to work you to death, and if you don't like it leave, there are ten people standing outside the gate waiting for 
	your job."
That remind me a quote from the famous novel Jungle by Upton Sinclair "But I'm glad I'm not a pig!". 
The idea of "incredibly shrinking IT" works until it don't. Then scapegoats are found, punished and new round starts. 
As a result of downsizing and a recession, on-the-job stress is at all time high for many jobs including sysadmin jobs.  
One of the recent tricks which became possible with the wide availability of smart phones and cheap laptops is saving 
money by  keeping sysadmin in salaried position on call 24x7. There is some rational in that, if calls are reasonably rare, but 
when sysadmin became weekend tech support teams that's not fun.  If such cases try to get ssh on your smarphone and/or wide area 
internet card for you laptop. 
Stress from work induce some bad habits such as smoking, excessive consumption of caffeine, etc.  Even without acquired bad habits, 
chronic work stress effects are similar to those experienced by people who are smoking and not exercising. If someone feels like he/she 
is under constant pressure, you body reacts. your natural defenses are constantly on high alert. Stress hormones such as cortisone, 
are injected into bloodstream and such defensive reactions have a wear-and-tear effect. For example a high-pressure job doubles your 
risk of a heart attack.  Even working in a noisy office can cause stress hormones to rise to unhealthy levels.Often sysadmins 
are putting in long hours, taking work home and giving up much-needed vacation time. Many of sysadmins feel so busy, that they either 
don't eat lunch or eat it at their desks. Many sysadmins belong to high achiever types, who think they can handle difficulties on their 
own. They often don't ask for help until their stress snowballs and turns physical — in the form of headaches, sleep disorders or heartburn.
What is really bad is that eventually chronic stress strips away your ability to enjoy time off: people who juggle large workloads 
and feel overly responsible are easily becoming "chained to the desk" and unable to enjoy typical recreational activities when they're 
out of the office. 
For some people just the fact that they can be called produces a lot of anxiety and effects their well-being. That's 
especially true if you do not know the system all that well and vendor support is limited to 16 x 5.  The key here is that ability 
to say "No" and also offset time on call during weekends and holidays by late coming to work, extended lunches or days off.  The 
problem is that this often is not considered politically correct. Still that' the right thing to do.  To minimize social pressure 
simple email like "Was working Sunday 8am-1pm, will be at work Mn after lunch" is probably the best. 
The other way of diminishing stress is spending sufficient time to learn the ropes.  Do it at your work time. Remember 
that if you are called Sunday morning and vendor support is only 24x5 you better know your staff really well. 
Also periodically check that server hardware is under warranty yourself. Don't rely on your boss.  Set up server and systems monitoring 
so that you know when things are going wrong early. Mon is far from being perfect, but is free and simple to set up so it might be a 
good start.  Create baseline of a working system configuration management and use version control. Subversion or similar version 
control systems are preferable, but it looks for you as an overkill at least make backup of the configuration files before you make 
any (and I mean any) change.   
Actually making backups is what distinguish seasoned sysadmin from a novice. The former on their own experience understand the important 
of good, checked backups as reflected in this parody: 
	unknown source (well originally Paul McCartney :-) 
	
		Yesterday,
		All those backups seemed a waste of pay.
		Now my database has gone away.
		Oh I believe in yesterday.
	
Use any problem as a training ground. Perform "post-mortem" analyses and create plan of actions for the next occurrence. That can 
help to relieve the stress if such situation happens again.   And usually it will.  
A lot of anxiety and stress can be self-inflicted, especially for novices. Many disasters happen because of sysadmin errors or blunders. 
Study experience of others. A good start might be 
Sysadmin Horror Stories
If possible, try to negotiate that before you start supporting a new systems they provide vendor training. Negotiate SAL if you can, 
but at least know them and discuss with your boss as if they are unrealistic you implicitly increase your level of stress. 
Overload is a related problem. See Overload for more details. 
But the key is still getting personal knowledge of all the infrastructure. In some type of problems occur on regular but pretty sparse 
intervals, create fire drills for yourself to keep your knowledge current.  inside out, take good backups, test your backups 
and have a DR plan with SLAs for each system and agree it with your business so that people can't turn around in an emergency and demand 
that you fix *their* system right now because they suddenly decided it was important.
Excessive diversity of environment is detrimental here. Try to limit the number of OSes you support to two so that you can concentrate 
on leaning them in depth. If you need to support more then three OSes that's a bad situation and you might want to think how to move 
yourself in better environment. 
Try to relieve stress with exercise, not with alcohol or pot. Humor is a powerful tool for leveling stress and anxiety too. See
The number of programming and sysadmin jobs in the United States is stagnant or declining. Consolidation rules and outsourcing adds 
insult to injury. Many of the newly jobless sysadmins do have savings and severance, but others do not. Some have been living beyond 
their means and must face a frightening new financial reality. So many of the newly unemployed were fortunate to live “the dream”: they 
had nice homes, cars and clothes, ate at expensive restaurants and went on vacation at least once a year. They spoiled their children 
with computers and iPods. But with unemployment so high, these people often struggle to find a similar job, or any job — especially 
if they are over 50. The harsh reality is that when companies do hire sysadmins, they often choose to forgo the value of age and experience 
in favor of younger, cheaper neophytes. As a result, the jobless may find themselves unable to pay their mortgages and fear losing home. 
They may need to downsize to a degree that is almost paralyzing. 
You need to prepare for such an emergency and have a sizable "survival fund" which covers at least two years of "downsized" living.  
Unemployment can last more then a year in the current conditions and I know histories of pretty capable sysadmins who were out of work 
for more then two years.  For example after Bear Sterns collapse.   If the emergency funds run out you can still use 
your 401K for some time without penalty.  Return to school is also an option. At least you can get those scholarship funds. 
All too often, as financial resources dwindle, family life and other relationships suffer, too — which can lead to isolation, depression 
and even suicidal thoughts. In this sense it is important to preserve a resemblance of usual life style and preserve the habit get out 
of  home in the morning, if only going to the library. 
It is also important to pay additional attention to maintaining healthy lifestyle, including exercise. Paradoxically many unemployed 
sysadmin pursue more unhealthy lifestyle then when their were employed, stating most of the time at home and spending all their day 
on computer. Please remember that unemployed are usually more susceptible for various health conditions. But here comes the next problem: 
The  unemployed have often lost their health coverage as well as their jobs. It's important to get minimal (hospital and emergencies) 
coverage early on before six month since you previous health coverage ended. the cost is not outrageous and in many states is less then 
$200 per month.  Some state such as NY and NJ subside such an insurance and you can get it for slightly more then $100. 
Gifted people often have problems finding and keeping friends, they usually suffer from
envy and
jealousy toward colleagues who are more talented or less talented, 
but more successful professionally.  And vice versa, they can despise those who are less talented or less trained. Attitude 
toward "losers" and associated folklore is part of the latter.  
People with exaggerated self-worth and 
narcissists (which is actually a type of sociopaths) 
typically  secure a sense of superiority in the face of another person's ability by using contempt to minimize the other person. 
In short, in many sysadmins there is a built-in competition drive and you should view all those "vanity fair" things philosophically 
or they can definitely poison your life.  Bertrand 
Russell said envy was one of the most potent causes of unhappiness.
There are additional problems in marriage due to high pressures from work which is nothing new and is common to many other specialties. 
People usually add "sysadmin wives" to the long list of suffering spouses who deal with a spouse with a high-demand profession.  
So it's important to remember that a genuine interest in the profession is good but obsession with it is not. 
See 
It is not easy to preserve sanity in the crazy environment. But fighting for the ideas you consider valuable definitely helps. It 
would be nice to get rid of some "evil corporate gnomes" but they are replaceable and readily availble commodities. So cool down as 
for revenge. I do not have ready made recipes but recently I came across an interesting
comment in Calculated Risk blog:
	Stephane Hessel. 93 years old. Just published a short book in France. Cry Out! It's sold 600,000 copies in two months. 
	His publisher has ordered another 200,000 printed.
	Hessel, Jewish. Escaped a Nazi concentration camp in WWII and joined DeGaulle. Worked in French resistance.
	The thesis of his book? Some quotes:
	
		- "I would like everyone – everyone of us – to find his or her own reason to cry out. That is a precious gift. When 
		something makes you want to cry out, as I cried out against Nazism, you become a militant, tough and committed. You become part 
		of the great stream of history ... and this stream leads us towards more justice and more freedom but not the uncontrolled freedom 
		of the fox in the hen-house."
  
		- "It's true that reasons to cry out can seem less obvious today. The world appears too complex. But in this world, there 
		are things we should not tolerate... I say to the young, look around you a little and you will find them. The worst of all 
		attitudes is indifference..."
  
		- "The productivist obsession of the West has plunged the world into a crisis which can only be resolved by a radical shift 
		away from the 'ever more', in the world of finance but also in science and technology. It is high time that ethics, justice 
		and a sustainable balance prevailed..."
 
	
	Just as he "cried out" against Nazism in the 1940s, he said, young people today should "cry out against the complicity between 
	politicians and economic and financial powers" and "defend our democratic rights acquired over two centuries".
Dr. Nikolai Bezroukov
- 20210606 :  Sociopaths are not capable of loyalty-- they sell their services to whoever promotes them and undercut whoever is in their way   ( March / April 2004. ,  Ivey Business Journal ) 
 
- 20201025 : A Vaporware Executive- An Attitude, Not a President   ( Urban Dictionary  ) 
 
- 20130718 :  	Microsoft Has 1 Million Servers. So What   ( Slashdot ) 
 
- 20130718 :  Microsoft's one million servers what it means ITworld   (  Microsoft's one million servers what it means ITworld, Jul 18, 2013 ) 
 
- 20130718 : Nine traits of the veteran  	Unix admin  by Paul Venezia  ( Feb 14, 2012 , Infoworld ) 
 
- 20130519 : Faced With  Overload, a Need to Find Focus  by Tony Schwartz   ( NYTimes.com ) 
 
- 20130519 :  Microsoft Has 1 Million Servers. So What -   (  Microsoft Has 1 Million Servers. So What -,  ) 
 
- 20130519 :   Slashdot   (   Slashdot,  ) 
 
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- 20130519 : Can You Say "Bubble"?   ( Can You Say "Bubble"?,  ) 
 
- 20130327 : Most  IT Admins Have Considered Quitting Due To Stress    (  Mar 27, 2013 ,  Slashdot ) 
 
- 20130326 : Not your fathers IBM - I, Cringely   ( Not your father's IBM - I, Cringely, Mar 26, 2013 ) 
 
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- 20130326 : Dealing with Your Incompetent Boss - Amy Gallo - Best  Practices - Harvard Business Review   ( Dealing with Your Incompetent Boss - Amy Gallo - Best  Practices - Harvard Business Review,  ) 
 
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- 20120815 : 9 Reasons  Why Application Developers Think Their Manager Is Clueless    (  Business Technology Leadership ) 
 
- 20120815 : The real reason managers are clueless   ( softpanorama.org,  ) 
 
- 20120811 : Jargon busters   ( 2005 ) 
 
- 20120810 :  Business Has Killed IT With Overspecialization  by Charlie Schluting  ( April 7, 2010 , Enterprise Networking Planet ) 
 
- 20120808 : MC MCSE Corporate Speak Dictionary for  programmers.   ( MC MCSE Corporate Speak Dictionary for  programmers., Aug 08, 2012 ) 
 
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- 20120402 : Why I left Google - JW on Tech  - Site Home - MSDN Blogs  by James Whittaker  ( Why I left Google - JW on Tech  - Site Home - MSDN Blogs, Apr 02, 2012 ) 
 
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- 20111202 : The Other One  Percent: Corporate Psychopaths and the Global Financial Crisis   ( Dec 02, 2011 , Jesse's Café Américain ) 
 
- 20111012 : AOL  Creates Fully Automated Data Center   ( October 11, 2011 , Slashdot  ) 
 
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- 20110505*  Scripts OTN   by Prashant Pilankar (Infosys)  (   Slashdot ) [Recommended] 
 
	
		|   | 
		"I appreciate Woody Allen's humor because one of my safety valves is an appreciation for life's absurdities. 
		His message is that life isn't a funeral march to the grave. It's a polka." -- Dennis Kusinich 
		 | 
	
 
	
   
   
   Toxic managers dot the landscape in most organizations, making them seem, at times, like war 
   zones. These managers can complicate your work, drain your energy, compromise your sanity, derail 
   your projects and destroy your career. Your ability to deal with these corporate land mines will 
   have a significant impact on your career. Those who are able to recognize toxic managers quickly 
   and understand what makes them tick will be in the best position to protect themselves. Difficult 
   managers are a fact of life and how they affect your life depends upon the skills you develop to 
   deal with them.
   The issue is not simply a matter of individual survival. Toxic managers divert people's energy 
   from the real work of the organization, destroy morale, impair retention, and interfere with 
   cooperation and information sharing. Their behaviour, like a rock thrown into a pond, can cause 
   ripples distorting the organization's culture and affecting people far beyond the point of 
   impact.
   Senior management and HR can significantly improve an organization's culture and functioning 
   by taking steps to find and contain those who are most destructive. Leadership can spare an 
   organization serious damage by learning how to recognize problematic personality traits quickly, 
   placing difficult managers in positions in which their behaviour will do the least harm, 
   arranging for coaching for those who are able to grow, and knowing which managers are time bombs 
   that need to be let go.
   This article will help you learn how to avoid becoming a scapegoat, to survive aggressive 
   managers' assaults, and to give narcissistic and rigid managers the things they need to be 
   satisfied with you. It will also help senior management and HR to recognize toxic managers before 
   they do serious damage. The basic theme of the article is that to deal effectively with toxic 
   behavior you need to understand what lies underneath it, design an intervention to target those 
   underlying factors, and have sufficient control of your own feelings and behaviour so that you 
   can do what is most effective, rather than let your own anger or anxiety get the best of you. In 
   other words, you need to develop your emotional intelligence.
   ... ... ...
   Narcissistic managers
   Preoccupied with their own importance, narcissistic managers are grandiose and arrogant. They 
   devalue others, lack empathy for others and have little, if any, conscience. Feeling exempt from 
   the normal rules of society, they exploit people without remorse. Narcissistic individuals are 
   also very sensitive to anything that threatens their self-esteem. Challenges to their grandiose 
   self image can lead to narcissistic rage that sees them lose all judgment and attack in ways that 
   are destructive to themselves and their victims.
   Arrogant with peers and subordinates, they may suddenly become submissive in the presence of a 
   superior. Once the superior has left, they may well disparage her. They generally deprecate and 
   exploit others, including former idols. They may, however, idealize powerful individuals who 
   support them, though only for a short time.
   Under the surface, narcissistic managers struggle with fragile self-esteem. They also have a 
   sense of emptiness arising from their lack of true self-love and inability to care about other 
   people or about abstract values such as honesty and integrity. Their grandiose fantasies are 
   attempts to fill the emptiness and reinforce their fragile self-esteem.
   The classic narcissistic manager is grandiose. Grandiose managers are legends in their own 
   minds. Preoccupied with their exaggerated accomplishments and grandiose expectations for the 
   future, they expect others to hold them in awe. Constantly boasting, they resemble peacocks 
   strutting around with their tail feathers unfurled.
   Some narcissistic managers are not effusive about their abilities and accomplishments. What 
   stands out about them is a willingness to exploit others, a willingness to break the law, or a 
   desire to control and dominate others.
   Narcissistic managers are less likely to make major changes in their behaviour than are 
   managers with other issues. They are also particularly likely to become outraged and vindictive 
   if someone challenges their behaviour. Therefore, when you are dealing with a manager who is 
   rigid or aggressive, it is important to know whether narcissism or other disorders lie underneath 
   their destructive behaviour.
   A milder variant of narcissistic managers are those with learned narcissism. They are not 
   desperately trying to hide and shield fragile self-esteem arising from a troubled childhood. 
   Rather, their success in some area has brought sufficient fame and fortune that they have been 
   shielded from the normal consequences of behaving arrogantly and treating others poorly. 
   Moreover, as people incessantly flatter them, they come to believe the glorifying compliments. 
   Although somewhat grandiose and inconsiderate of others, these people have a conscience and can 
   feel empathy for others; they simply do not realize the full impact of their behavior on others. 
   People with learned narcissism are far more amenable to change than are those with narcissism 
   resulting from problems early on in emotional development.
   
   
   Coping with a narcissistic manager is very difficult for most people. You can't make it a fun 
   experience, but there are things you can do to make yourself less vulnerable to them.
   If you are subordinate to a narcissistic manager:
   
      - Avoid criticizing them
 
      - Show admiration
 
      - Don't outshine them; play down your accomplishments and ambition
 
      - Document your work
 
      - Build relationships to a mentor
 
      - Keep your eyes open for other positions
 
      - Do not take their behaviour personally
 
   
   Superiors of narcissistic managers also need to be careful. If you supervise a narcissistic 
   manager you should:
   
      - Watch your back
 
      - Don't ignore signs of trouble
 
      - Don't believe them over their subordinates
 
      - Assess if the narcissism is learned or from early development and if it can be modified 
      with the help of a therapist/coach
 
      - Get coaching for them
 
      - Get 360 feedback on them and use it as a major part of their assessment
 
   
   ... ... ...
   Case Study: Dealing with a Narcissistic VP
   Bill was the vice president of a mid-sized company. His unit had grown rapidly and was 
   profitable. He had special knowledge and skills that made him very valuable to the company. At 
   the same time, the company's president was increasingly aware that the morale in Bill's unit was 
   poor and that turnover was high. The president instructed Bill to obtain some coaching. He balked 
   and the CEO relented. In time, however, things went from bad to worse. The CEO considered firing 
   Bill. The cost of finding a replacement, and the inefficiencies suffered while the new person 
   came up to speed, would be high. Nevertheless, he couldn't let the unit continue to bleed people. 
   Faced with the possibility of being fired, Bill agreed to executive coaching.
   Bill balked at 360 feedback but he agreed to let the coach speak with people and observe his 
   ways of interacting. What people reported, and what the coach saw, was a driven person who lacked 
   concern for others, focused on his own needs, was constantly snapping at people, rarely gave a 
   pat on the back, and sometimes stole credit for others' work. He certainly fit the description of 
   the narcissistic manager.
   There was, however, another part of him. At times, he really seemed concerned about others. In 
   individual discussions with the coach, Bill's insecurity and depression stood out more than his 
   grandiosity. The coach determined that rather than having the core personality structure of a 
   narcissistic individual, Bill had been so successful that he had been able to get away with 
   stepping on people and was relatively clueless about how others felt and how his behavior 
   affected their performance.
   A major factor in Bill's behaviour was a mild chronic depression. He did not enjoy things that 
   much and rarely smiled. A great deal of his irritability came from the mild depression. The coach 
   convinced him to try an antidepressant. Bill's snapping at people declined in a few days. In a 
   month he seemed like a different person. With his depression gone he not only felt much less 
   irritable, but had the emotional energy to think about others' feelings and to begin to look at 
   his own behaviour more than he had before. He had many bad habits in how he related to people, 
   but he was now able to begin to look at them and gradually make changes.
   ... ... ...
   
   The toxic boss or toxic manager. We've all encountered them. Moody, aggressive, unpredictable, 
   incompetent, always blaming other people. A compulsive liar with a Jekyll and Hyde nature, the 
   individual, male or female, is always charming and plausible when management are around.
   Toxic bosses and toxic managers prevent staff doing their jobs and prevent employees 
   fulfilling their duties. They thrive in a toxic work environment. Unpredictable moods, 
   conflicting demands, inconsistent orders, random decision-making, inability to plan 
   strategically, inability and unwillingness to communicate and co-operate, obstructive ... the 
   list goes on. If management suddenly appoint a toxic boss as your manager, you'll realise that 
   toxic shock syndrome is not just a female condition. If you've got a toxic manager, your problems 
   have just begun. And they won't get better. 
   When you tackle the toxic manager, you feel like you've gone 15 rounds with Mike Tyson. And 
   everything will be your fault. You have a "negative attitude", you're a "poor performer", you're 
   "not up to the job", and so on. If you get as far as alerting personnel or human resources 
   management, it'll be a "personality clash". In truth, this is a
   projection of the 
   bully's own negative attitude, poor performance, and incompetence.
   How do you recognise a toxic boss?
   To recognise a toxic boss from their behaviour profile, click
   here. To recognise toxic bosses 
   from the effects of their behaviour, look for unusually high levels of the following in the 
   immediate (and not so immediate) vicinity of the toxic manager concerned: 
   
      - staff turnover
 
      - sickness absence
 
      - grievance action
 
      - disciplinary action
 
      - stress breakdown
 
      - suicide or attempted suicide
 
      - death in service
 
      - customer complaints
 
      - ill health retirements
 
      - early retirements
 
      - reorganisations
 
   
   Fatal Attraction (1987) is a classic among films depicting violent BPD and female psychopath. It 
depicts well the details of borderline personality disorder: the self-delusion, the emotional 
coercion, the complete disintegration of logic and final loss of control. It 
was built up from a short film by screenwriter James Dearden. This is one of two Adrian Lyne 
sensual films, the other two are "Indecent 
Proposal" and
 Unfaithful. 
It is an educational movie though I prefer the original ending (available on special collector 
edition DVD), not the revised, way-over-the-top, grade B horror movies ending. Glenn Close's abrupt 
spiral into insanity and violence during the last third of Director Lyne's Fatal Attraction is the 
weakest part of the movie. 
Softpanorama Recommended
  Psychological abuse, also referred to as emotional abuse or mental abuse, is a form of
  abuse characterized by a person subjecting or exposing 
  another to behavior that may result in psychological 
  trauma, including anxiety,
  chronic depression, or
  post-traumatic stress disorder.[3] 
  Such abuse is often associated with situations of power imbalance, such as
  abusive relationships,
  bullying,
  child abuse and
  abuse in the workplace.[3] 
  There were "no consensus views about the 
  definition of emotional abuse." As such, clinicians and researchers have offered sometimes divergent definitions of emotional 
  abuse. However, the widely used Conflict 
  Tactics Scale measures roughly twenty distinct acts of "psychological aggression" in three different categories:
  
    - Verbal aggression (e.g., saying something that upsets or annoys someone else);
 
    - Dominant behaviours (e.g., preventing someone to have contact with their family);
 
    - Jealous behaviors (e.g., accusing a partner of maintaining other parallel relations).
 
  
Gaslighting - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  
  
  
  Ingrid Bergman in the 1944 film 
  Gaslight
  Gaslighting is a 
  form of psychological abuse in which false 
  information is presented with the intent of making a victim doubt his or her own
  memory,
  perception and
  [1]  Instances may range 
  simply from the denial by an abuser that previous abusive 
  incidents ever occurred, up to the staging of bizarre events by the abuser with the intention of
  disorienting the victim.
  Psychologist Martha Stout states that sociopaths frequently use gaslighting tactics. Sociopaths consistently transgress 
  social mores, break laws, and exploit others, but are also typically charming and convincing liars who consistently deny 
  wrongdoing. Thus, some who have been victimized by sociopaths may doubt their perceptions.[6]
  Jacobson and Gottman report 
  that some physically abusive spouses may gaslight their partners, even flatly denying that they have been violent.[3]
  Psychological manipulation is a type of
  social influence that aims to change the
  perception or behavior of others through underhanded,
  deceptive, or even
  [1] By 
  advancing the interests of the manipulator, often at the other's expense, such methods could be considered
  exploitative, abusive, devious, and deceptive.
  Social influence is not necessarily negative. 
  For example, doctors can try to persuade patients to 
  change unhealthy habits. Social influence is generally perceived to be harmless when it respects the right of the influenced 
  to accept or reject and is not unduly coercive. Depending on the context and motivations, social influence may constitute 
  underhanded manipulation.
Searching for a Corporate Savior- The Irrational Quest for Charismatic CEOs Enron's Skilling offers a dramatic and instructive 
illustration of the perils of charismatic corporate leadership. 
Fog of war - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  The fog of war is a term used to describe the level of ambiguity in situational awareness experienced by participants 
  in military operations.[1] The term seeks to capture the uncertainty regarding own 
  capability, adversary capability, and adversary intent during an engagement, operation, or campaign. The term is ascribed 
  to the Prussian military analyst
  Carl von Clausewitz, who wrote:
  "The great uncertainty of all data in war is a peculiar difficulty, because all action must, to a certain extent, 
  be planned in a mere twilight, which in addition not infrequently-like the effect of a fog or moonshine-gives to things 
  exaggerated dimensions and unnatural appearance."[2]
  The term may also be a reference to the use of black 
  powder in warfare, which often produced clouds of thick "fog", obscuring the battlefield from observers.
▶ How To Spot A Psychopath (10 Signs) - YouTube
▶ Robert Hare - Psychopath-Sociopath - The Difference 
- YouTube
▶ Diagnosing A Sociopath - YouTube
▶ Understanding Narcissistic Personality Disorder 
- YouTube
▶ Narcissists & Sociopaths (ASPD) Are Dangerous! 
How to Keep Safe. Expert Rosenberg - YouTube
▶ Deep into the Mind of Narcissists & Sociopaths. 
Dealing with Covert Narcissism & Sociopathy Expert - YouTube
▶ How to Deal With a Psychopath - YouTube
▶ Why Narcissists devalue you - YouTube
▶ The Punking process of the Narcissist and other 
toxic persons to watch out for ! - YouTube
▶ The Psychopath - ABC - Catalyst (2012) - YouTube
▶ James Fallon - Psychopath - Insight - YouTube
▶ How to Deal With a Psychopath - YouTube
▶ How to Tell Who's a Real Psychopath with Dr. James 
Fallon - YouTube
▶ PSYCHOPATHS IDENTIFYING THEM BEFORE YOU GET INVOLVED 
- YouTube
▶ How To Identify And Protect Yourself From Psychopaths, 
Thomas Sheridan 7may2013 - YouTube
▶ Lifting The Veil Thomas Sheridan Psychopaths - 
YouTube
▶ Inside Cornell Analyzing the words of psychopaths 
- YouTube
▶ Financial Terrorism Exposed - Thomas Sheridan 
(Psychopaths in Public Life ) - YouTube
▶ The World Only Makes Sense to Psychopaths Thomas 
Sheridan Vinny Eastwood Show Feb 24 2012 - YouTube
▶ PSYCHOPATHS IDENTIFYING THEM BEFORE YOU GET INVOLVED 
- YouTube
▶ See Through People - Psychopaths Narcissists - 
YouTube
▶ DANGEROUS NARCISSISTS - YouTube
▶ Psychopathic Child AP Psychology - YouTube
  Choosing the best presidential candidate among the 2008 contenders is a tough job. Picking the worst is easy. Rudy Giuliani 
  is the guy you'd get if you put George Bush and Dick Cheney into a wine press and squeezed out their pure combined essence:
  
  
    - unbounded arrogance and self-righteousness, 
 
    - a chip on his shoulder the size of a redwood, 
 
    - a studied contempt for anybody's opinion but his own, 
 
    - a vindictive streak a mile wide, 
 
    - and a devotion to secrecy and executive power unmatched in presidential history. 
 
  
  He is a disaster waiting to happen.
Entrez PubMed Overcome toxic management.
  Ineffective, ill-tempered managers hurt employee morale and productivity. Learn what behaviors characterize toxic managers, 
  how they damage an organization, and how to lessen their impact.
Society
Groupthink :
Two Party System 
as Polyarchy : 
Corruption of Regulators :
Bureaucracies :
Understanding Micromanagers 
and Control Freaks : Toxic Managers :  
Harvard Mafia :
Diplomatic Communication 
: Surviving a Bad Performance 
Review : Insufficient Retirement Funds as 
Immanent Problem of Neoliberal Regime : PseudoScience :
Who Rules America :
Neoliberalism
 : The Iron 
Law of Oligarchy : 
Libertarian Philosophy
Quotes
 
War and Peace 
: Skeptical 
Finance : John 
Kenneth Galbraith :Talleyrand :
Oscar Wilde :
Otto Von Bismarck :
Keynes :
George Carlin :
Skeptics :
Propaganda  : SE 
quotes : Language Design and Programming Quotes :
Random IT-related quotes : 
Somerset Maugham :
Marcus Aurelius :
Kurt Vonnegut :
Eric Hoffer :
Winston Churchill :
Napoleon Bonaparte :
Ambrose Bierce : 
Bernard Shaw : 
Mark Twain Quotes
Bulletin:
Vol 25, No.12 (December, 2013) Rational Fools vs. Efficient Crooks The efficient 
markets hypothesis :
Political Skeptic Bulletin, 2013 :
Unemployment Bulletin, 2010 :
 Vol 23, No.10 
(October, 2011) An observation about corporate security departments :
Slightly Skeptical Euromaydan Chronicles, June 2014 :
Greenspan legacy bulletin, 2008 :
Vol 25, No.10 (October, 2013) Cryptolocker Trojan 
(Win32/Crilock.A) :
Vol 25, No.08 (August, 2013) Cloud providers 
as intelligence collection hubs : 
Financial Humor Bulletin, 2010 :
Inequality Bulletin, 2009 :
Financial Humor Bulletin, 2008 :
Copyleft Problems 
Bulletin, 2004 :
Financial Humor Bulletin, 2011 :
Energy Bulletin, 2010 : 
Malware Protection Bulletin, 2010 : Vol 26, 
No.1 (January, 2013) Object-Oriented Cult :
Political Skeptic Bulletin, 2011 :
Vol 23, No.11 (November, 2011) Softpanorama classification 
of sysadmin horror stories : Vol 25, No.05 
(May, 2013) Corporate bullshit as a communication method  : 
Vol 25, No.06 (June, 2013) A Note on the Relationship of Brooks Law and Conway Law
History:
Fifty glorious years (1950-2000): 
the triumph of the US computer engineering :
Donald Knuth : TAoCP 
and its Influence of Computer Science : Richard Stallman 
: Linus Torvalds  :
Larry Wall  :
John K. Ousterhout : 
CTSS : Multix OS Unix 
History : Unix shell history :
VI editor :
History of pipes concept :
Solaris : MS DOS 
:  Programming Languages History :
PL/1 : Simula 67 :
C :
History of GCC development : 
Scripting Languages :
Perl history   :
OS History : Mail :
DNS : SSH 
: CPU Instruction Sets :
SPARC systems 1987-2006 :
Norton Commander :
Norton Utilities :
Norton Ghost :
Frontpage history :
Malware Defense History :
GNU Screen : 
OSS early history
Classic books:
The Peter 
Principle : Parkinson 
Law : 1984 :
The Mythical Man-Month : 
How to Solve It by George Polya :
The Art of Computer Programming :
The Elements of Programming Style :
The Unix Hater’s Handbook :
The Jargon file :
The True Believer :
Programming Pearls :
The Good Soldier Svejk : 
The Power Elite
Most popular humor pages:
Manifest of the Softpanorama IT Slacker Society :
Ten Commandments 
of the IT Slackers Society : Computer Humor Collection 
: BSD Logo Story :
The Cuckoo's Egg :
IT Slang : C++ Humor 
: ARE YOU A BBS ADDICT? :
The Perl Purity Test :
Object oriented programmers of all nations 
: Financial Humor :
Financial Humor Bulletin, 
2008 : Financial 
Humor Bulletin, 2010 : The Most Comprehensive Collection of Editor-related 
Humor : Programming Language Humor :
Goldman Sachs related humor :
Greenspan humor : C Humor :
Scripting Humor :
Real Programmers Humor :
Web Humor : GPL-related Humor 
: OFM Humor :
Politically Incorrect Humor :
IDS Humor : 
"Linux Sucks" Humor : Russian 
Musical Humor : Best Russian Programmer 
Humor : Microsoft plans to buy Catholic Church 
: Richard Stallman Related Humor :
Admin Humor : Perl-related 
Humor : Linus Torvalds Related 
humor : PseudoScience Related Humor :
Networking Humor :
Shell Humor :
Financial Humor Bulletin, 
2011 : Financial 
Humor Bulletin, 2012 :
Financial Humor Bulletin, 
2013 : Java Humor : Software 
Engineering Humor : Sun Solaris Related Humor :
Education Humor : IBM 
Humor : Assembler-related Humor :
VIM Humor : Computer 
Viruses Humor : Bright tomorrow is rescheduled 
to a day after tomorrow : Classic Computer 
Humor 
The Last but not Least  Technology is dominated by 
two types of people: those who understand what they do not manage and those who manage what they do not understand ~Archibald Putt. 
Ph.D
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Last updated: 
June 28, 2021
   The Bozo Explosion, so colorfully described by Guy Kawasaki, is a theory which states that "A" 
   players hire "A+" players, but "B" players hire "C", "C" hire "D", which ultimately leads to a company 
   full of bozos.
   
      "I refined this slightly-my theory is that A players hire people even better than themselves. 
      It's clear, though, that B players hire C players so they can feel superior to them, and C players 
      hire D players. If you start hiring B players, expect what Steve called "the bozo explosion" to 
      happen in your organization." – Guy Kawasaki
   
   Most of us have met "bozos" before in our work and personal lives. If you're lucky, you've only 
   seen them in the check-out aisle at the grocery store and quickly been able to divert your path away 
   to a different lane - never to see them again.
   If you're unlucky, you work for a "bozo" or near one.
   There is nothing more soul-crushing than being constantly surrounded by bozos in your life. And 
   there's nothing that kills a company faster that the rapid proliferation of bozos working for it 
   (especially as CEO).
   What is a bozo? It's a little like pornography, you know it when you see it. However, let me try 
   to more precisely define one.
   A bozo is someone who thinks they are much smarter and capable than they actually are. They constantly 
   over-estimate their abilities and under-estimate the risks and threats around them. They typically 
   don't keep an open-mind. They look instead for data that confirms a previously held bias. They also 
   don't handle details well. They expect other people to clean up their messes when they happen, and 
   so don't feel the need to obsess over the little things. Because they don't have a keen sense for 
   the competitive market in which they operate, they typically don't have good judgment in key strategic 
   decisions or when hiring top talent. Instead of hiring the smartest folks around them, bozos prefer 
   to hire people who blow smoke, telling them how great they are, or for some non-obvious business 
   reason such as sharing the same college or frat.
   One of the first detailed discussions of the damage bozos can do to companies was in Walter Isaacson's 
   recent biography on Steve Jobs at Apple (AAPL).
   Here are some choice Jobs' quotes from the book on the subject:
   Apple's Dynamic Duo- On John Sculley:
   I began to realize this a month after he arrived. He didn't learn things very quickly, and the people 
   he wanted to promote were usually bozos.
   – From Atari's Al Alcorn:
   Sculley believed in keeping people happy and worrying about relationships. Steve didn't give a 
   shit about that. But he did care about the product in a way that Sculley never could, and he was 
   able to avoid having too many bozos working at Apple by insulting anyone who wasn't an A player.
   One Must Prevent a Bozo Explosion 
   – On getting rid of the bozos who worked at Apple after he sold NeXT to Apple: "I wanted to make 
   sure the really good people who came in from NeXT didn't get knifed in the back by the less competent 
   people who were then in senior jobs at Apple."
   – When he was asked by an Apple director what he thought of then CEO Gil Amelio:
   
      "I thought to myself, I either tell him the truth, that Gil is a bozo, or I lie by omission. 
      He's on the board of Apple, I have a duty to tell him what I think; on the other hand, if I tell 
      him, he will tell Gil, in which case Gil will never listen to me again, and he'll fuck the people 
      I brought into Apple. All of this took place in my head in less than thirty seconds. I finally 
      decided that I owed this guy the truth. I cared deeply about Apple. So I just let him have it. 
      I said this guy is the worst CEO I've ever seen, I think if you needed a license to be a CEO he 
      wouldn't get one. When I hung up the phone, I thought, I probably just did a really stupid thing."
   
   – On how Amelio had no self-awareness that he was a bozo:
   
      "He was just such a buffoon, and he took himself so seriously. He insisted that everyone call 
      him Dr. Amelio. That's always a warning sign. For most things in life, the range between best 
      and average is 30% or so. The best airplane flight, the best meal, they may be 30% better than 
      your average one. What I saw with Woz was somebody who was 50 times better than the average engineer. 
      He could have meetings in his head. The Mac team was an attempt to build a whole team like that, 
      A players. People said that they wouldn't get along, they'd hate working with each other. But 
      I realized that A players like to work with A players, they just didn't like working with C players. 
      At Pixar, it was a whole company of A players. When I got back to Apple, that's what I decided 
      to try to do. You need to have a collaborative hiring process. When we hire someone, even if they're 
      going to be in marketing, I will have them talk to the design folks and the engineers. 
      My role model was J. Robert Oppenheimer. I read about the type of people he sought for the 
      atom bomb project. I wasn't nearly as good as he was, but that's what I aspired to do."
   
   So, what do you have to do to create a "no bozo" policy at your company? Here are 7 rules for 
   how to implement one:
   1. Never hire another bozo. If you are a hiring manager, you have the final say. Never 
   let another bozo come in to your company. Sometimes we all have our blinders on because the candidate 
   likes the same sports team as us. Therefore, get lots of input from others around you whose opinion 
   you trust. Bozos are like cockroaches: you'll never get rid of them after bringing them into your 
   home.
   2. If you don't have a final say on hiring someone, tell the truth to your boss about what 
   you think of a prospective bozo hire. You've got to tell the truth – even if there is a risk 
   that you'll lose your job for speaking the truth. If your boss is going to hire a bozo, let's face 
   it: you probably need to start looking for another job anyway. It's just a matter of time until they 
   bring down your team and then your company. If you threaten to quit now, you'll probably get your 
   boss to think twice before signing off on the bozo in question.
   3. Get rid of any existing bozos already on the payroll. These folks might be pleasant and 
   make good conversation in the lunch room, but they're a cancer. They need to be exorcised from 
   the organization's body as soon as possible. If they're not rooted out, they will multiply. One new 
   bozo will hire 4 more bozos in short order. Again, you've got to speak the truth to those who have 
   the power to get rid of them. Even if it leads to a showdown between you and the bozo in front of 
   your boss, you've got to fight for what you believe in. If you lose your job, it'll be a blessing.
   4. Cut out the bozos at the root. Because bozos procreate so quickly, you've got to be surgically 
   quick and precise in getting rid of them. Start at the root cause. The bozo from which all other 
   bozos come. Many follow-on bozos will follow the chief bozo out the door when he or she departs. 
   That's a good thing. Morale in the rest of the organization will noticeably rise overnight. A lightness 
   and energy will return to the company.
   5. Encourage active debate in order to serve your company's ultimate customer. It's a sad 
   truth that some formerly great employees can turn into bozos over time. It happens. We all can lose 
   interest and motivation over time. We might have been great basketball players in high school but 
   not so much in our 30s. There might be a natural time when we all should leave a company. The recently 
   ousted co-CEOs at Research In Motion (RIMM) – Jim Balsillie and Mike Lazaridis - are a textbook case 
   of that. Steve Jobs' ouster at Apple in the 1980s is another good example of how this can be even 
   true for one of the greats. To keep everyone on their toes and fully engaged in the product and market 
   dynamics, it's important to encourage active debate within a company. There should be no sacred cows. 
   Mid-level managers shouldn't be afraid to call Steve Jobs - or some other senior executive who is 
   seemingly always right - that he's being a bozo about a particular issue or decision. Jobs had lots 
   of terrible ideas. His people didn't accept those terrible ideas and pushed back – and he eventually 
   appreciated that even if he disagreed with them at first.
   6. It's not personal, it's business. So many organizations fail under their own weight 
   because people get caught managing up or worrying more about their own career path or organizational 
   politics rather than ensuring the best decision gets made in the moment. Disagreements should never 
   be personal - only focused on the best business decision.
   7. You're never that important. Another way you can let yourself turn into a bozo over 
   time is starting to believe you're brilliant. You've got to be self-confident, but you can't ever 
   let yourself think you're too important to have lunch with your employees or meet with real customers. 
   Calling yourself "Dr." Amelio was dumb because it signals to others that you think you're very important. 
   Building yourself a fancy office - as John Thain did in his job at Merrill Lynch, even when the world 
   was blowing up around him - is another sign that you're overly focused on insignificant priorities 
   affecting your company. You might be in the top job as CEO, but you are always replaceable.
   Never forget that.
   
   Someone who enables the Bozo Explosion, either intentionally or due to their inexperience and incompetence.
   The Bozo Explosion was possibly coined by Steve Jobs at Apple:
   
      "Actually, Steve believed that A players hire A players-that is people who are as good as they 
      are. I refined this slightly-my theory is that A players hire people even better than themselves. 
      It's clear, though, that B players hire C players so they can feel superior to them, and C players 
      hire D players. If you start hiring B players, expect what Steve called "the bozo explosion" to 
      happen in your organization." -- Guy Kawasaki 
   
   My manager is the lead Bozo Bomber at my company. He makes sure everyone in the business is as dumb 
   as a caveman, then he can swoop in like Superman and save the day. Man, does it make him look good. 
   Terrible for the business though.
   by starfruitman 
   December 06, 2011 
   Here's some gratifying news for any employees out there who are feeling bullied by a tyrannical boss: 
   That aggressive behavior may have little to do with you, and a lot to do with your boss's feelings 
   of incompetence. A new
   
   study in Psychological Science found that when managers are made to feel insecure about 
   their job performance, their aggressiveness skyrockets. "Power 
   holders feel they need to be superior and competent. When they don't feel they can show that legitimately, 
   they'll show it by taking people down a notch or two" [New 
   Scientist], says study coauthor Nathanael Fast.The researchers got 410 volunteers 
   from various workplaces to fill out questionnaires about their position in the workplace hierarchy, 
   how they felt about their job performance, and their aggressive tendencies. They also conducted a 
   series experiments on the volunteers. In one, they manipulated the subjects'
   sense of power and self-worth by asking them to write about 
   occasions when they felt either empowered or impotent and then either competent or incompetent. Previous 
   research has suggested that such essays cause a short-term bump or drop in feelings of power and 
   capability [New 
   Scientist]. Next they asked the volunteers to set the level of punishment for (imaginary) 
   university students who got wrong answers on a test. Those people who felt more powerful and more 
   incompetent picked the harshest punishments, the study found.
   So what's to be done with a bullying boss? Coauthor Serena Chen says a little ego stroking may 
   make life easier for everyone. "Make them feel good about themselves 
   in some way," Chen said, suggesting this might mean complimenting a hobby or nonwork activity provided 
   it is "something plausible that doesn't sound like you're sucking up" [San 
   Francisco Chronicle].
   Related Content:
   80beats:
   
   Teenage Bullies are Rewarded With Pleasure, Brain Scans Show
   DISCOVER: So, You Want 
   to Be the Boss?
   Your boss could well be a barely restrained psychopath. Indeed, it is probable that he is the 
   living incarnation of Cthulhu himself. Or he may be a bumbling incompetent who'll sink your career 
   along with his. You, the downtrodden techie, need to learn how to deal with him - and fast.
   First, stop thinking of him as a person because it is making you too soft and disabling the parts 
   of your brain that can effectively change his behaviour.
   ... ... ... 
   10: The moron
   This is actually the easiest to deal with, just so long as you never ever let them think you've 
   worked out that this is their bug.
   A good measure of intelligence is the number of things you understand and the depth to which you 
   grok them so lack of intelligence is worked around by keeping the number and depth lower.
   This expresses itself in a way familiar to those of you who've done search engine optimisation. 
   Identify their buzzwords to work out what I call "Business Correctness," the more lucrative sibling 
   of the political kind. Despite their track record, Accenture get a lot of business by using words 
   like "team" because managers like teams (defined as doing what they are told) and in your firm there 
   will be terms like "risk reduction", "delivery" and "cost reduction". Some even still talk of "quality".
   All you have to do is note these terms and use them more often; firstly to make you look like 
   a "good team player" and secondly as decoration on anything you want to make look better or worse, 
   though in general positive BC words work better.
   There are of course more types of AntiManager than this and feel free to share them in the comments 
   below, but the point I'd like you to take away and use is that you can model their behaviour using 
   skills you already have to turn their documented features into something useful.
   Here's some gratifying news for any employees out there who are feeling bullied by a tyrannical boss: 
   That aggressive behavior may have little to do with you, and a lot to do with your boss's feelings 
   of incompetence. A new
   
   study in Psychological Science found that when managers are made to feel insecure about 
   their job performance, their aggressiveness skyrockets. "Power 
   holders feel they need to be superior and competent. When they don't feel they can show that legitimately, 
   they'll show it by taking people down a notch or two" [New 
   Scientist], says study coauthor Nathanael Fast.The researchers got 410 volunteers 
   from various workplaces to fill out questionnaires about their position in the workplace hierarchy, 
   how they felt about their job performance, and their aggressive tendencies. They also conducted a 
   series experiments on the volunteers. In one, they manipulated the subjects'
   sense of power and self-worth by asking them to write about 
   occasions when they felt either empowered or impotent and then either competent or incompetent. Previous 
   research has suggested that such essays cause a short-term bump or drop in feelings of power and 
   capability [New 
   Scientist]. Next they asked the volunteers to set the level of punishment for (imaginary) 
   university students who got wrong answers on a test. Those people who felt more powerful and more 
   incompetent picked the harshest punishments, the study found.
   So what's to be done with a bullying boss? Coauthor Serena Chen says a little ego stroking may 
   make life easier for everyone. "Make them feel good about 
   themselves in some way," Chen said, suggesting this might mean complimenting a hobby or nonwork activity 
   provided it is "something plausible that doesn't sound like you're sucking up" [San 
   Francisco Chronicle].
   Related Content:
   80beats:
   
   Teenage Bullies are Rewarded With Pleasure, Brain Scans Show
   DISCOVER: So, You Want 
   to Be the Boss?
   
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   alexander bogan said:
   Harms of Bullying
   Bullying is a serious problem that harms not only the victim, but everyone that it touches. It can 
   have a serious negative effect on the bully, witnesses, and the environment as a whole.
   The most obvious harm occurs to the victim. It could be anything from physical injury to embarrassment, 
   to harm to their self esteem and even potential for success in the future. Extreme bullying (particularly 
   coupled with sexual harassment) may cause depression or even lead to suicide. Victims often display 
   lowered self-esteem and lowered grades, anxiety, and decreased attentiveness. Being bullied may cause 
   a child to shy away from other children as well, or even adults--or it may cause them to become clingy, 
   fearing separation from adults. It really depends on the individual child, the situation, and the 
   intensity of the bullying, but it is clear that the harm is very real.
   However, while attention is usually focused on this harm to the victim, also be aware of the negative 
   effects on the bully. Studies have shown* that bullies are more likely to drop out of school, and 
   that forty percent are convicted of at least three crimes by the age of twenty-four. Elementary school 
   bullies are five times more likely than non-bullies to have a criminal record by the age of thirty. 
   They are more likely to be involved in domestic violence and to work jobs below their skill level. 
   Moreover, a bully's children are more likely to be bullies themselves, resulting in a vicious cycle 
   of abuse.
   Even if other students are not directly involved in the bullying, it can also have a negative impact 
   on witnesses and the educational environment as a whole. Other children may be anxious or afraid 
   that it could happen to them as well. They may be confused about whether to tell someone, or alienated 
   by friends who are bullied. Bullying leads to an imbalanced environment, and can cultivate a culture 
   of fear at a very young age.
   Because Cyberbullying is a relatively new phenomenon, we do not know enough about how some of the 
   harms above may or may not apply--but we do know that it is leading to more and more bullies, which 
   means more and more victims. The next articles in this series will examine more closely how cyberbullying 
   differs from traditional bullying.
   
   Read more: http://www.brighthub.com/education/k-12/articles/10833.aspx#ixzz0dwKvkjZPhfmyhrkjdghfkdh
   
   3 years ago
   Flag comment as inappropriate
   
   Shem said:
   It sucks that we Live to work in the modern ages, The comment above by the "boss guy" regarding 
   us moaning cos were not in chains @ our desk, well pal, thankfully we progressed a little beyond 
   your slave driving ways. When they all agree its a 3 dayweek then we can spend more of our time with 
   our loved ones more time being happy in life and not working for power greedy ego maniacs, studies 
   on how to keep incompetent people out of positions with power is research thats needed....
   after all the same guys are pressing the red buttons of war and making dumb ass choices for us 
   "workers" and directing the course of our history.
   Maybe in 500 yrs we work a 3 day week, now wouldnt that be cool!
   
   3 years ago
   Flag comment as inappropriate
   
   Kathleen said:
   Sucking up doesn't really work in the long run based on my work with both victims and perps. It's 
   obvious and disempowers the target. Share real compliments, if possible. Focus on work requirements 
   and look the bully in the eye, that helps them to back down. Study avoids focus on one real purpose 
   of bullying-consolidation of power including and especially control and ownership of careers. They 
   may feel powerless but sometimes they're consolidating power by destroying others.
   
   3 years ago
   Flag comment as inappropriate
   
   Chad Cartwright said:
   Employees have been coddled and cuddled too long in America. This decade has been seen thru the 
   filter of television, popularising the poor office worker. Meanwhile office worker productivity has 
   dwindled with the advent of the web and text messages.
   I bet half of you whiny jokers are posting on the clock! Just be glad you aren't chained to your 
   work space like your ancestors were. I slaved my way thru college while my employees were smoking 
   pot and having babies before they could provide for them.
   
   3 years ago
   Flag comment as inappropriate
   
   gold brick said:
   Driver type incompetents usually have little patience. When my maroon of an employer asks me a 
   question, I barrage him with (way) too much information. I try to keep his eye contact as well so 
   he can't fake that he is listrning to me. He squirms like the eel that he is. Now when he sees me 
   coming, he moves on to an easier target.
   
   3 years ago
   
   So what hallmarks of incompetence have I learned to identify?
   
      - 
      
      Bias against action:There are always plenty of reasons
      
      not to take a decision, reasons to wait for more information, more options, more opinions. 
      But real leaders display a consistent bias for action. People who don't make mistakes generally 
      don't make anything. Legendary ad man David Ogilvy argued that a good decision today is worth 
      far more than a perfect decision next month. Beware prevaricators.
 
      - 
      
      Secrecy: "We can't tell the staff," is something I hear managers say repeatedly. They 
      defend this position with the argument that staff will be distracted, confused or simply unable 
      to comprehend what is happening in the business. If you treat employees like children, they will 
      behave that way -- which means trouble. If you treat them like adults, they may just respond likewise. 
      Very few matters in business must remain confidential and good managers can identify those easily. 
      The lover of secrecy has trouble being honest and is afraid of letting peers have the information 
      they need to challenge him. He would rather defend his position than advance the mission. Secrets 
      make companies political, anxious and full of distrust.
 
      - 
      
      Over-sensitivity: "I know she's always late, but if I raise the subject, she'll be hurt." 
      An inability to be direct and honest with staff is a critical warning sign. Can your manager see 
      a problem, address it headlong and move on? If not, problems won't get resolved, they'll grow. 
      When managers say staff is too sensitive, they are usually describing themselves. Wilting violets 
      don't make great leaders. Weed them out. Interestingly, secrecy and 
      over-sensitivity almost always travel together. They are a bias against honesty.
 
      - 
      
      Love of procedure: Managers who cleave to the rule book, to points of order and who refer 
      to colleagues by their titles have forgotten that rules and processes 
      exist to expedite business, not ritualize it. Love of procedure often masks a fatal 
      inability to prioritize -- a tendency to polish the silver while the house is burning.
 
      - 
      
      Preference for weak candidates: We interviewed three job candidates for a new position. 
      One was clearly too junior, the other rubbed everyone up the wrong way and the third stood head 
      and shoulders above the rest. Who did our manager want to hire? The junior. She felt threatened 
      by the super-competent manager and hadn't the confidence to know that you must always hire people 
      smarter than yourself.
 
      - 
      
      Focus on small tasks: Another senior salesperson I hired always produced the most perfect 
      charts, forecasts and spreadsheets. She was always on time, her data completely up-to-date. She 
      would always volunteer for projects in which she had no core expertise -- marketing plans, financial 
      forecasts, meetings with bank managers, the office move. It was all displacement activity to hide 
      the fact that she could not do her real job.
 
      - 
      
      Allergy to deadlines: A deadline is a commitment. The manager who cannot set, and stick 
      to deadlines, cannot honor commitments. A failure to set and meet deadlines also means that no 
      one can ever feel a true sense of achievement. You can't celebrate milestones if there aren't 
      any.
 
      - 
      
      Inability to hire former employees: I hired a head of sales once with (apparently) a 
      luminous reputation. But, as we staffed up, he never attracted any candidates from his old company. 
      He'd worked in sales for twenty years -- hadn't he mentored
      
      anyone who'd want to work with him again? Every good manager has alumni, eager to join the 
      team again; if they don't, smell a rat.
 
      - 
      
      
      Addiction to consultants: A common -- but expensive -- way to put off making decisions 
      is to hire consultants who can recommend several alternatives. While they're figuring these out, 
      managers don't have to do anything. And when the consultant's choices are presented, the ensuing 
      debates can often absorb hours, days, months. Meanwhile, your organization is poorer but it isn't 
      any smarter. When the consultant leaves, he takes your money and his increased expertise out the 
      door with him.
       
      - 
      
      Long hours: In my experience, bad managers work very long hours. They think this is a 
      brand of heroism but it is probably the single biggest hallmark of incompetence. To work effectively, 
      you must prioritize and you must pace yourself. The manager who boasts of late nights, early mornings 
      and no time off cannot manage himself so you'd better not let him manage anyone else. 
 
   
   
   Poor leadership surrounds us, it's a fact of life and they seemingly find a way to keep their 
   jobs. They are more focused on their personal needs and not of the professional needs of those below 
   them. They have a hard time developing their employees because they lack the proper management techniques 
   to do so. A leader is someone who you would follow to a place you would not go alone. Leadership 
   is about action not status. 
   However, the question is, how do we know when we are dealing with these flaw ridden individuals. 
   A lot of the time, a poor manager can make the perception that he/she is busy and organized. I have 
   developed a small guideline that can help pinpoint these leaders. 
   Incompetent Leaders will: 
   1. Delegate work rather than balance work loads. This allows all attention to be diverted 
   from them in case of failure. It may seem to them that are managing their people but in actuality 
   they are creating work imbalances within the group. It can create unnecessary overtime for some and 
   under utilization of others. A good manager is aware of the skill sets of all the people below them 
   and should allocate work accordingly while trying to enhance the skills of everyone to be even more 
   productive. 
   2. Reduce all answers to Yes or No rather than explaining their reasoning. This is an example 
   of a crisis manager who can not think farther than a few hours ahead. A yes/no manager finds it a 
   waste of time to find the real answer through intellectual thought. They are already thinking about 
   the next crisis. 
   3. Not separate personal life from professional life. They will bring their personal problem 
   to work. Working for these types of managers can be very dramatic. They are unable to separate their 
   emotional imbalances while trying to manage people. They are less focused and will not give you the 
   attention and direction you need for success. 
   4. Manage crisis. If you are a company that has crisis managers, then you can say goodbye 
   to innovation and progression. Proactive thinking is critical to the success of any company. If you 
   are not finding ways to stop or reduce the amount of crisis that has to be managed, then your competition 
   will pass you by. Leaders have to think out of the box and make change. 
   5. Create an environment where mistakes are unacceptable. Being held accountable for wrong 
   decisions is a fear for them. Making mistakes only helps you become a better person, manager, etc. 
   I use the analogy of a basketball player that has no fouls. If they are not going for the ball and 
   taking chances with their opponent, then they are trying hard enough. Take a chance and don't be 
   scared. 
   6. Humiliate or reprimand an employee within a group. This is a clear and visible sign 
   of a poor leader. A good leader takes employee problems away from a group setting to a more private 
   setting. If you have a boss that does this, it is time for a visit to human resources. 
   7. Not stand behind subordinates when they fail. Never leave your people to hang out to 
   dry. Always back them up, right, wrong, or indifferent. If an employee tries their best in a situation 
   and they fail to come through. They should be commended on their effort and not punished for the 
   failure 
   8. Encourage hard workers not smart workers. I am not impressed with hard workers. A hard 
   worker is usually defined by hours. Smart workers are the ones that I hire and embrace. Smart workers 
   understand the concept of time management and multi-tasking. Poor leaders miss this connection. Smart 
   workers are methodical in their thinking and can generally be successful because of their abilities 
   management projects and time. Hard workers may take twice as long to do the work. It is important 
   to assign work accordingly to the skills and personalities 
   9. Judge people on hours not performance. This is similar to #8. Again, I am not impressed 
   with overtime junkies. They have lost all perspective on a healthy family/balance. Bad managers will 
   promote the employees that work the most hours and not look at the smart ones who work less……….meaning 
   have better time management. Stop watching the lock. 
   10. Act differently in front of their leaders. This is an indication of low self-confidence. 
   They have doubts about their own ability to lead and they will act like little children when authority 
   is present. A confident person acts the same around everyone. Remember, have respect for them, but 
   also have self-respect. 
   Chris Ortiz is also the author of : 40+ Overtime Under Poor Leadership 
   Book Available at:
   
   Authorhouse.com 
"Power holders who do not feel personally competent are more likely than those who feel competent 
to lash out against other people."
   
   ABSTRACT
   When and why do power holders seek to harm other people? The present research examined the idea 
   that aggression among the powerful is often the result of a threatened ego. Four studies demonstrated 
   that individuals with power become aggressive when they feel incompetent in the domain of power. 
   Regardless of whether power was measured in the workplace (Studies 1 and 4), manipulated via role 
   recall (Study 2), or assigned in the laboratory (Study 3), it was associated with heightened aggression 
   when paired with a lack of self-perceived competence. As hypothesized, this aggression appeared to 
   be driven by ego threat: Aggressiveness was eliminated among participants whose sense of self-worth 
   was boosted (Studies 3 and 4). Taken together, these findings suggest that (a) power paired with 
   self-perceived incompetence leads to aggression, and (b) this aggressive response is driven by feelings 
   of ego defensiveness. Implications for research on power, competence, and aggression are discussed...
   CONCLUSION
   The present findings highlight the importance of perceiving personal competence when holding a 
   position of power. Power holders who do not feel personally competent 
   are more likely than those who feel competent to lash out against other people. Additionally, 
   the finding that self-worth boosts assuage the aggressive tendencies of such power holders implies 
   the effectiveness of a strategy commonly employed by underlings: excessive flattery. It is both interesting 
   and ironic to note that such flattery, although perhaps affirming to the ego, may contribute to the 
   incompetent power holder's ultimate demise-by causing the power holder to lose touch with reality.
   Full paper at:
   
   http://www-rcf.usc.edu/~nathanaf/power_incompetence_and_aggresssion.pdf 
   The first is important because, yes, believe it or not, many folks are still threatened by a Black 
   face in corporate America. The last person you want threatened is your boss, who can either make 
   it easy for you to pursue your vision or make life a day-to-day hell. Therefore, remembering tip 
   number 5, you want your boss to seem as if he or she is the smartest person in the world for hiring 
   you. To do that you have to give credit generously and publicly in front of clients or top management 
   for the great guidance and direction your boss provides in conducting whatever project you are working 
   on.Simultaneously you also need to let those same people know that most of the good works they 
   are seeing are your own original ideas come to life, and that without all the hard work you put into 
   the project, there would be no project. You need to do this especially if your boss is not the type 
   to be forthcoming with praise (a trait more typical of an empty suit than a power broker). Therefore, 
   in casual conversations with your clients or others, let it be known how at 2:15 in the morning, 
   when you were just going over the documents one last time, it hit you what the answer to the issue 
   was.
   Praise your boss in public forums; take credit in one-on-one conversations--but don't overdo it 
   or appear to be showing off.
   If you've been in the business world very long, it's likely you've run into a manager who just 
   wasn't doing the job right. If that hasn't happened to you yet, it will probably happen sometime 
   in your career. The question is how do you relate and react to the incompetent boss? You need to 
   remember biblical principles in dealing with these people. 
   Someone once told me that you can learn as much from an incompetent or bad manager as you can 
   from a good one, and I think that's probably true. But the learning is more difficult and painful!
   
   
      - Trying to work for a boss who is either lazy, disorganized, inexperienced, or unqualified 
      for their job as manager.
 
      - Others work for a boss who uses tactics or methods which are either unethical or ineffective 
      or contrary to company policy. 
 
   
   Their "people skills" are usually sadly lacking, and they are not willing to accept suggestions 
   or help from anyone else.
   Well, there's no question that our relationships with those in authority over us are unique. While 
   we recognize that a person's level or position does not make that person better than anyone else, 
   we also know that we should respect those who are over us. That is a biblical principle.
   Romans 13:1-2 says: "Everyone must submit himself to the governing authorities, for there is no 
   authority except that which God has established. The authorities that exist have been established 
   by God. Consequently, he who rebels against the authority is rebelling against what God has instituted, 
   and those who do so will bring judgment on themselves."
   Now, frankly, this is not an easy passage to either understand or accept. Our natural minds rebel 
   against this statement that all authority comes from God, since we see so much evidence that many 
   people in authority are neither godly nor competent. Can their authority be God-given? What 
   about the Peter-principle; the person who has risen to his or her level of incompetency?
   The Apostle Paul is teaching us that God has established authority as the order for the universe. 
   We see it in every part of creation; some things have authority over others. And if it were not for 
   the principle of authority, we would have nothing but chaos. You and I daily submit ourselves to 
   all kinds of authority: red lights, stop signs, the law of gravity, taxes, police officers, etc. 
   Without these authorities governing us, and everyone else, our world would be inhabitable and unmanageable.
   The same is true in our business world. We require authority in order to operate a business of 
   any kind. The buck has to stop somewhere. Therefore, the people in positions of authority are part 
   of God's plan for authority. And as Christians, we are directed to submit ourselves to those 
   people who have risen to those authority positions. To rebel against that is to rebel against 
   God's order, and, Paul said, it will bring judgment on us.
   Obviously there have been and are people in positions of authority who should never be there. 
   But that was true when Paul wrote this letter to the Romans. The principle still holds true; we may 
   not respect the people themselves, but we must respect their position.
   This is contrary to the times. I remember a business training class I conducted where a woman 
   said to me privately, "Mary, I'm older and I'm used to the old way of doing things. I treat my boss 
   with lots of respect, do things for him that the other secretaries don't do. That's the way I was 
   trained. But the other women in the office are angry at me for treating my boss like I do, and they 
   keep telling me that it makes them look bad and I shouldn't do it. What do you think?"
   She was taught to respect authority almost to the point of fear. But during the 60's and 70's 
   we saw a backlash against all authority, when everyone over 30 was seen as suspicious, and that generation 
   was taught to reject and challenge all authority. Neither extreme is right: We should not give respect 
   to authority out of fear, but neither is it right to be disrespectful toward authority. We seem to 
   have much difficulty with balanced and biblical attitudes, don't we?
   Given the general disregard and disrespect we find in our culture for authority, this passage 
   in Romans 13 which tells Christians to submit to authority doesn't sit well in our ears. That's not 
   the way the world looks at it.
   But as Christians in the marketplace, it is where we start. We have to make certain that in our 
   hearts we accept this principle of authority and recognize that even though the authority over us 
   may be incompetent or inadequate in some way, they are nonetheless in authority and therefore we 
   respect their position.
   First Peter 2:18 says that we must submit ourselves to our masters with all respect, not only 
   to those who are good and considerate, but also to those who are harsh. An incompetent boss is harsh, 
   difficult, unpleasant. But the principle of submitting and respecting their authority still applies. 
   Now, if you're not willing to apply that biblical principle, you will invite trouble into your life.
   Well, how do you apply it when you don't feel it? You do it by faith, not by feelings. You pray 
   it into your life on a daily basis. You read those verses from Romans 13 often, and you ask God to 
   change your attitude and change your thinking so that you can accept the authority that is over you.
   First Timothy 2:1-2 tells us to offer requests, prayers, intercession and thanksgiving for everyone, 
   for kings and all those in authority, that we may live peaceful and quiet lives in all godliness 
   and holiness. We are to pray for those in authority, and we are to pray for peaceful relationships. 
   Now, if you're dealing with an incompetent boss, have you been praying for him or her regularly? 
   How have you been praying for that person? This is where it starts, and until you begin to truly 
   pray for them, you won't see much change in your attitude or in their behavior.
   So, we begin by accepting God's principle of authority, respecting that incompetent boss, praying 
   for them, praying that we will be able to get along with them in peace and display a godly attitude. 
   Praying that they will improve in their job.
   Smart employees understand that their job description includes making their boss look good. The 
   world uses that principle as a manipulative tool, but we have other reasons to do it. First Corinthians 
   13 describes the kind of love we are to develop in our lives, a love that is like God's love. And 
   that kind of love "does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always 
   trusts, always hopes, always perseveres."
   As Christians we are to ever be seeking to have God's love fill us and overflow through us to 
   everyone in our lives, including our incompetent bosses. Therefore, we should try to make them look 
   good, not for manipulation purposes, but because God's love motivates us to protect others from bad 
   exposure, to delight in the good things they do, not the bad things, to try to cover up their mistakes 
   whenever we can.
   Proverbs 17:9 says, "He who covers over an offense promotes love, but whoever repeats the matter 
   separates close friends." One of the typical things that happens when we encounter an incompetent 
   boss is that we talk about that person in derogatory ways. It's easy to do. A friend was sharing 
   with me that her boss is very difficult and no one agrees with the way her boss runs the department. 
   She has no trouble gaining confirmation from her co-workers that her negative attitude toward her 
   boss is justified; everyone feels the same way.
   It's likely if you truly work for an incompetent boss that everyone else feels the same way you 
   do, and therefore, at lunch and on breaks that's what you talk about. Instead of covering up the 
   offense, you repeat the matter and make the situation much worse.
   If you work for an incompetent or difficult boss, stop talking about him or her to other people. 
   Pray for that boss; talk to the Lord; get counsel from respected Christians and others inside and 
   outside the company. But don't be a part of the office gossip and character assassination which usually 
   happens when you have this type of boss.
   Now, when you've got those biblical principles in place in your life, then you can start to consider 
   whether it is ever right to confront an incompetent boss, or to blow the whistle on them. And there 
   aren't any black and white answers here because the circumstances would dictate what type of action 
   to take. However, I believe confrontation or exposure should be the last thing we do, after other 
   attempts have failed, and after much prayer.
   Here are some guidelines to consider in deciding whether or not to confront your incompetent boss. 
   First, is their incompetency truly affecting the quality of the product or service which the customer 
   receives? Is their inability to manage truly causing unfair treatment for employees, others as well 
   as yourself? Are they doing things which are contrary to your organization's stated standards and 
   policies? In other words, is there a larger picture here than simply your own irritations and frustrations 
   at having to work for an incompetent manager?
   If you're convinced there is a larger picture, then confrontation may be advisable. But, again, 
   this must be done with great respect for their authority. You look for ways to make suggestions for 
   improvement without pointing the finger at them. You try to find a way to make it look like their 
   idea to which you are contributing. You do everything you can not to undermine their own self-image 
   as the boss.
   An incompetent boss is likely to be very insecure. They are most probably quite aware of their 
   shortcomings, though they may not be able to openly admit them or talk about them. Indeed, they may 
   deny them. But underneath the facade, you can be fairly certain they are very uncertain and insecure 
   about their performance. Therefore, they're going to be worried about someone else showing them up 
   and exposing their shortcomings.
   Sweetness of speech increases persuasiveness, as we read in Proverbs 16:21, and if we truly want 
   to help our incompetent manager to improve, we have to make our suggestions with carefully chosen 
   words. I am not suggesting we use flattery or deceit of any kind. But if we look long enough, we 
   can find something good to say about them and to them, something positive to lead with, some way 
   to confront without seeming confrontational.
   It's not easy; I know. But let me tell you this. It's easier than doing it the other way. If you've 
   been stewing and fretting over your incompetent boss; if you're constantly frustrated because you 
   want to get rid of him or her or tell them off; if you've been angry at having to put up with their 
   incompetency when you know you could do it better-tell me, has that been easy?
   Of course not. It's a more natural reaction than following biblical principles, but it's not easier 
   on you or anyone else. It's harder-takes a much greater mental and emotional toll on you.
   Doesn't it make sense, then, to simply ask God to give you his perspective and his power to deal 
   with your incompetent boss in a Christlike way? The good news is, because of Jesus we have the power 
   to do it. But we have to be willing to allow Him to do it through us.
   
   Mary's book, Getting Along with People @ Work, gives much good advice in dealing 
   with difficult people. You can order by calling 1-800-292-1218 or online at
   www.christianworkingwoman.org
   
   If it's any consolation, you're not alone if you're saddled with an incompetent boss.
   Thousands of unqualified bosses somehow manage to hold onto their jobs. There are even inept CEOs 
   who couldn't run a broom closet, let alone multimillion-dollar corporations.
   How Do You Know If Your Boss Is Incompetent? 
   Don't berate yourself for not realizing your boss was a hopeless nincompoop before you took the 
   job. How could you know what the future would hold back at the interview when you were totally focused 
   on making a great impression? And your boss probably didn't have any opportunities to demonstrate 
   incompetence while being on his best behavior. 
   But now that you've settled into your job, the signs of incompetence can be likened to headlights 
   on a pitch-black night. They're unavoidable. 
   Common clues include: 
   
      - Inability to make decisions: An incompetent boss often waffles over decisions that 
      should be made instantly. 
 
      - Tendency to make bad choices: Ineffectual bosses often make poorly planned, miscalculated 
      decisions. Miraculously, most incompetent bosses manage to save themselves at the 11th hour.
      
 
      - Reliance on subordinates to get work done: Incompetent bosses may not have a clue how 
      to get their own jobs done, yet they have the uncanny sense to rely on their teams to cover for 
      them. 
 
      - Ability to keep the job despite failings: You'd be shocked how many inept bosses hold 
      onto their jobs despite their failings. Many management consultants have yet to figure out why. 
      Typically, they rely on their subordinates to get them through hard times. 
 
   
   Take Advantage Your situation looks far worse than it is. Don't be so quick to take the 
   first new job you can find just to get away from your boss. Learning to adjust could be a career-enhancing 
   experience. Incredible as it seems, your boss's ineptitude could be a blessing. 
   For example, you have the chance to stand out by becoming an asset to your boss. The more you 
   do and accomplish, the better it looks on your
   resume. It also scores points with management 
   and potential employers. 
   Try these strategies for turning unfortunate circumstances into an advantage: 
   Cover in a Crisis. If your boss is away on a business trip or vacation and an issue requiring 
   instant decision-making arises, you have two choices: either turn the problem over to a senior manager 
   or make the decision yourself. Calling in senior managers makes your boss look bad. If you're confident 
   you can take over, you'd be wise to make the decision. Remember: Heroes are born in crisis situations.
   
   Compensate for Deficiencies. It's to your advantage to discover your boss's weak spots 
   and help him in those areas. You want to be part of a winning team, and your boss is this team's 
   captain. You will get much further in a company if you can be associated with successful projects. 
   For example, an incompetent boss will struggle with complex ventures. Guide him through it until 
   everything is completed. You'll look good by making your team look good. 
   Beware. Watch what you say about your boss. It's very easy to complain and vent frustrations 
   about your less-than-qualified boss to coworkers. Without realizing it, you could be talking to the 
   boss's good friend or someone who wants to score points with him. Keep your opinions to yourself.
   As a mid-level employee, you've been working for the ACME Company, a manufacturing firm, for the 
   past two years. Your job performance has been solid, and on occasion, even praiseworthy. However 
   due to the current economic conditions – poor profit earnings, massive layoffs and company restructuring, 
   you now find yourself working for a new boss. Ordinarily reporting to a new leader would not pose 
   a real problem but this time it feels different -- management practices have changed. The team environment 
   has been transformed from one of true collaboration, honest dialogue and a commitment to problem 
   solving to one where backstabbing, finger pointing and plain fear are the norms. Congratulations 
   – you are now under the control of an "incompetent" leader!
   An "incompetent" leader by definition is someone whose action destroys camaraderie, instill gossip, 
   encourage dishonesty, and prevent people from speaking freely. "Incompetent" leaders tend to use 
   their own weapons to get noticed and promoted. They usually lack vision, interpersonal communication 
   skills and confidence to resolve conflict.
   You might think the term "incompetent" leaders should only be reserved for those in the company's 
   upper echelon such as the Chief Executive Officer of Chief Financial Offer. 
   After all, aren't they the ones entrusted with setting the direction for the entire organization? 
   While this may be true to a certain extent – CEOs do serve as the "compass" for the company, but 
   many CEOs are not directly involved in the daily operations of their organizations. Those responsibilities 
   fall on the shoulders of senior and middle managers. And, it is the "collective leadership" of those 
   managers -- their style of execution, their effective ability to communicate, manage and motivate 
   their teams that keep companies on course. If a leader lacks the competency to manage his or her 
   team, then team morale diminishes, productivity and performance drops, and companies 
   ultimately fail. What's worst is the fact that today we live in a heavy Information Economy where 
   bad news about a company spreads instantly thereby allowing competitors to profit from your company's 
   incompetent leadership.
   In the quest to attain "better and cheaper staff," one would think that organizations had all 
   the advantages needed to rid their companies of every single under-performing employee – managers 
   included. However, nothing could be farthest from the truth. Unfortunately in many cases, it is the 
   good, high-performing, mid-level employees who first are shown the door, while ineffective managers 
   – the ones who really need to take a hike – remain.
   For whatever reason these foul apples may have been left behind; the fact that they are present 
   causes a lot of problems either through their actions or sometimes through their inactions. The tnt 
   initiatives to detect and remove them before bringing irreparable harm to an organization. 
   So what can you do to protect yourself and survive working for an "incompetent" leader? Here are 
   some quick tips:
   1. Do not make it a personal matter. This is a hard one, simply because working for an 
   incompetent boss is such a personal matter. Remember, that most of these leaders do not have a problem 
   directly with you, but they too are frustrated and are shouting loud their own insecurities -- most 
   likely mirroring to you things that they should be doing. 
   2. Observe Your Boss. It might sound funny, but notice what is going on around your boss. 
   In case you've known or worked with your boss before and you observe a sudden change, then your next 
   step should be to take action right away. The problem could be as simple as someone asking him something 
   way out of his league, or someone talking to him about you and your team. Whatever the reason might 
   be you need to act and confront your boss as soon as possible. If you do this at the beginning, you 
   might be able to stop a snowball effect -- not only for you but also for the entire team. Confrontation 
   does not come easy for most people, yet if you seek a constructive conversation, have an open mind, 
   avoid turning it into a personal attack, you might be able to ease tensions with your boss and also 
   improve his position.
   3. Accumulate Facts. Nothing is irrelevant if you work in an unhealthy environment. You 
   need to make sure that you accumulate all the things that matter for your career -- the good as well 
   as the bad stuff. Good things that you've done, bad things that have happened to you, and things 
   that you could have done better. The key here is to have nothing against you, nothing that will give 
   people permission to talk about you and question your character.
   4. Know Your Value. You might feel beaten down, overworked, under appreciated and doubtless 
   about your true value. Grow up! Things happen and your value does not diminish simply because one 
   cannot see your true value. If you are a professional, do a good job, and the people that work with 
   you will see a direct contribution to the team's success. Then be sure that you have created your 
   own evangelists – people who will tell others about your true value.
   5. Expand Your Network. Now, more than ever, you need to think that working for a large 
   company is not very different than working on your own. You need to learn to promote yourself. People 
   need to know who you are, within your company and outside your company. Successful business owners 
   never stop networking. There are so many things you can learn simply by networking. The key here 
   is to find 2 or 3 networking initiatives that you feel comfortable doing and commit to them. 
   6. Seek For Comfort Outside Your Office. Many people often make this mistake. They work 
   for an incompetent boss and they start complaining about her or him to a "good friend" who also works 
   for the company. For whatever reason this might happen because you are seeking comfort or love. Sometimes 
   you simply need a sounding board in order to release the pinned-up stress. Do it outside the office 
   and avoid discussing your problems with others with whom you work.
   Times have changed and even though it might seem hard to work for someone that you know is not 
   suitable for his or her position, remember things and people appear to us to teach something. The 
   sad reality is most "incompetent" leaders do not get fired; they just move on and reinvent themselves 
   in new companies. The chance that you will either work with the same leaders or someone like them 
   again before your career ends is great. However if you manage to stay calm and think about the lessons 
   you've learned and how to counteract incompetent behavior, you will have all the wisdom needed in 
   order to become a better leader yourself in future jobs.
   Copyright ©2003, All Rights Reserved 
   Having worked for the old AT&T monopoly which had more levels of management than any other bureaucracy 
   in the world, with an employee-management ration of 2:1, I can say that the Peter Principle is not 
   based upon sound observation. Then having worked for the second largest employer in the USA, the 
   Federal government, I also observed that the Peter Principle is unsound. No employee is ever promoted 
   because that employee was competent or good at the position to which they were initially hired. No 
   one is promoted up the hierarchy because of good job performance. Promotions are based solely upon 
   sexual activity within the managerial group in control and nepotism. Problems are solved by contracting 
   the issue with consultants who simply charge an arm and a leg to give back suggestions from the employees, 
   which the management could have gotten for free if they ever bothered to talk with those employed 
   within the problem area. 
   The Federal bureaucracy has a slightly different approach depending upon the agency/department. 
   Competent persons are hired from the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) register with a 12 month 
   probationary period. The competent probationary employee then proceeds to resolve the problem and 
   bring order to the chaos. However, when the work is done, usually before the end of the 12 month 
   probationary period, the employee is then fired with the Federal agency alleging "poor job performance." 
   The supervisor with the problem area keeps his/her job, which is no more than a prostitute on-call 
   for their superior managers, and the probationary employee is stigmatized as a poor unproductive 
   employee and their career is ended. Even where the lives of the public and employees are endanger 
   from the company or Federal agency, this is how bureaucracy really works. 
   L. Peter must have been wearing rose-colored glasses when he made his observations.
   
   The Hindu Business LineIncompetence, the word most dreaded by managers. Woe betides the manager 
   who is declared incompetent by his superior and worse, by his subordinates. In the corporate world, 
   it is certainly a state worse than death. The word itself is so potently disagreeable by virtue of 
   its connotations that it is so sedulously avoided in the workplace. So much so that in a recent farewell 
   function when a speaker stated that the retiree had not reached his level of incompetence, the audience 
   thought a grave insult had been heaped on the poor man on the day of his superannuating. 
   The learned speaker was, in fact, complimenting the retiree on his capabilities, which had never 
   been adequately challenged in the organisation. Some of the audience thought the retiree needed an 
   extension to finish his alleged mission in the organisation, namely indulging in incompetence. This 
   was largely due to the fact that most in the audience, in their late thirties and early forties, 
   had never read the Peter Principle, a seminal work on incompetence. 
   Laurence J. Peter and Raymond Hull enunciated the Peter Principle in their eponymous book. Incompetence, 
   according to Peter, was the level at which a man could no longer be equal to his work. Theoretically, 
   all men and women are potentially incompetent; only that some fail only when called upon to play 
   God! 
   Thus, incompetence is latent in some and blatant in most. 
   The Peter Principle states: "In a hierarchy, every employee tends to rise to his level of incompetence." 
   And this occurs in an organisation by the vice, not virtue, of over promotion. The natural corollary 
   is that over a period of time the entire organisation is manned by incompetent people. The efficiency 
   of a hierarchy is inversely proportional to its Maturity quotient (MQ), where MQ=Sigma employees 
   at level of incompetence multiplied by 100 and in turn divided by Sigma employees in the organisation.
   
   Thus, when MQ reaches hundred no useful work will be accomplished. 
   Peter wrote his seminal work along with Raymond Hull in the late 1960s . People of my father's 
   generation used to swear by it. But in recent times the Peter Principle is just an occasional brooch 
   that adorns the lapel of a managerial suit. And worse, it is often misused and abused out of context. 
   The number of young students from premier business schools who confess with alacrity their non-cognition 
   of Peter's work finally galvanized me into writing this piece . 
   The Peter Principle spotlights the fact that every organization feels the overpowering compulsion 
   to promote a person from one level in the hierarchy to the next higher level. The danger of this 
   predilection is that often this is from a level of competence to a level of incompetence. Thus, a 
   competent mechanic is promoted to become an incompetent foreman, a competent foreman is made into 
   an incompetent superintendent, a competent teacher is made into an incompetent vice-principal and 
   a competent soldier is promoted to become an incompetent Field Marshal. In all these cases, the employees 
   had been promoted to a position that they were incompetent to fill. Or, in other words, they have 
   been promoted from a position of competence to a position of incompetence. 
   Over a period of time, the organization tends to be filled with employees who are incompetent 
   to operate their positions. In such a situation, one may well ask how does the work get done? Peter 
   answers, "Work is accomplished by those employees who have not yet reached their level of incompetence." 
   This explains how large bureaucracies and large public utilities turn out work in an even tenor. 
   This is probably due to the fact that at the base of the pyramidal structure of the hierarchy there 
   exists a large workforce who, by virtue of their intelligence and education, is still functioning 
   at levels where they are superior to their job or in other words competent. This notwithstanding, 
   organizations regularly indulge in over promotion. This results in a number of situations often catastrophic 
   to organizational fortunes, but comic as a managerial spectacle. 
   Peter sums up such promotions as pseudo promotions; the `lateral arabesque' is nothing but a pseudo 
   promotion consisting of a new title and an office in a remote part of the building. Peter cites the 
   example of a competent office manager who, after promotion, found himself at the same salary working 
   as coordinator of inter-departmental communications, supervising the filing of second copies of inter-office 
   memos. The other pseudo promotion is the `free-floating apex', which is nothing but a point in an 
   organization where there is no organization below the promoted employee. He has nothing to do and 
   nobody to supervise. The concept of `percussive sublimation' is also similar wherein an incompetent 
   manager is kicked upstairs to get him out of the way. 
   The moot question "Who defines competence" is answered by Peter: "His superior in the hierarchy 
   determines the competence of an employee. If the superior is on the level of competence, he will 
   evaluate his subordinate based on his output such as his productivity or his achievement of whatever 
   goals he has been set." But a superior who has reached his level of incompetence is likely to evaluate 
   on the basis of his inputs such as promptness, neatness, and courtesy to his superiors, internal 
   paper work, conformity to rules and so on. Peter says that in such a situation, internal consistency 
   is valued more highly than efficient service. This Peter calls as the `Peter's Inversion'. Sadly 
   the `inverts' have the ability to procure more promotions in an organization. 
   Hierarchical exfoliation 
   Peter states that in any organization the distribution of super competent, competent, incompetent 
   and super incompetent people occurs in the pattern of a bell curve, with super incompetent and super 
   competent people being on the fringes of the curve , and the large majority of the competent people 
   occurring on either side of the median. Super competence, Peter points out, is more hazardous than 
   incompetence since super competence disrupts the hierarchy. Peter cites the example of E. Beaver, 
   a probationary primary school teacher who put into practice what she had learnt in college about 
   accommodating the individual differences of her pupils. As a consequence, the brighter among the 
   pupils finished the three years' work in one year. Since she had disrupted the hierarchy, her contract 
   was terminated. The process of an exfoliation of the extremes namely the super incompetence and the 
   super competent, Peter calls `hierarchical exfoliation'. In the chapter `Follower and Leaders', Peter 
   points out the hierarchiological fallacies. He cites the example of the mother of George Washington 
   who, when asked how her son was so accomplished as a General, answered: "I taught him to obey." Peter 
   asks how the ability to lead depends on the ability to follow, as though the ability to float depends 
   on the ability to sink. Peter has classified incompetence into three categories: Physical incompetence 
   where a man who had been promoted beyond his physical capabilities; social incompetence where a man 
   is promoted to a step which is beyond his social capability; and emotional incompetence where a person 
   is promoted to a level which is beyond his emotional capacity. Despite being incompetent, a number 
   of candidates find themselves promoted to higher echelons in the hierarchy. This results in their 
   suffering from symptoms which are generally associated with success. These are peptic ulcer, alcoholism, 
   high blood pressure, skipped heartbeat and many more. Those who suffer from these, Peter describes 
   as those who have reached the final placement syndrome (FPS). Peter lists one sign of FPS - `abnormal 
   tabulology', which is an unusual and highly significant arrangement of his desk such as: 
   Phonophilia: In this, the incompetent manager masks his incompetence by keeping an array 
   on telephones and communication devices with flashing lights, hot lines and so on. 
   Papyrophobia: The papyrophobe swears by a clean desk and keeps papers strictly out as each 
   sheet reminds him of the work he is unable to do. 
   Papyromania: The exact opposite of the papyrophobe, he clutters his desk with papers and 
   tries to give an impression that he has too much to do. 
   Fileophilia: An obsession with record keeping and filing in the correct manner as this 
   keeps him from tackling the burning situation that needs to be addressed. 
   Tabulatory gigantism: A yen to have the largest desk in the office. 
   The psychological manifestations of FPS are self pity; denigration of the present and glorification 
   of the past - Peter calls this the `Auld Lang Syne syndrome'; irrational prejudice similar to Julius 
   Caesar's abhorrence of the "lean and hungry" looking Cassio or Napoleon's preference for men with 
   long noses; rigor cartis which is an obsession with flow charts and pie charts; and compulsive alternation 
   which is the inability to read a report and instead ask a brief of an executive summary from the 
   subordinate. "Look I have no time to wade through all this garbage. Tell me about this in your own 
   words and briefly," writes Peter. An extreme form of FPS is the `cachinatory inertia' in which the 
   subject is more interested in telling jokes than getting on with the business. 
   I am sure that everyone sees something of himself in Peter's creative descriptions of the managerial 
   maladies. Every young manager should make it a point to get hold of the Peter Principle and read 
   it over and over again. If not anything, it is a safe bet for an afternoon of rib tickling laughter 
   and a lingering sense of subtle edification. 
by Rick Brenner 
   After the boss commits even a few enormous blunders, some of us conclude that he or she is just incompetent. 
   We begin to worry whether our careers are safe, whether the company is safe, or whether to start 
   looking for another job. Beyond worrying, what else can we do?Let's say, hypothetically, that 
   your latest project has just crashed in flames because your boss forgot to sign off on the extension 
   for the 15 contractors who were staffing it, and they got reassigned. You can get them back in three 
   weeks, but you'll never meet the deadline now. You've just about had it, and you've decided that 
   your boss is totally incompetent. 
   All you really know is that your boss's performance has been pretty dismal. Incompetence is just 
   one possible explanation. For instance, your boss might be distracted by problems at home - a sick 
   parent or child, a death, a troubled marriage, substance abuse or identity theft, to name just a 
   few possibilities. 
   As subordinates, we rarely have enough data to support any diagnosis of the causes of our bosses' 
   poor performance. Without such data, attributing the cause of the problem to someone's character 
   or lack of talent could be an example of a common mistake called the
   Fundamental Attribution 
   Error. 
Chris Ortiz ia an author: 40+ Overtime Under Poor Leadership. The book Available at:
Authorhouse.com 
   Poor leadership surrounds us, it's a fact of life and they seemingly find a way to keep their 
   jobs. They are more focused on their personal needs and not of the professional needs of those below 
   them. They have a hard time developing their employees because they lack the proper management techniques 
   to do so. A leader is someone who you would follow to a place you would not go alone. Leadership 
   is about action not status. 
   However, the question is, how do we know when we are dealing with these flaw ridden individuals. 
   A lot of the time, a poor manager can make the perception that he/she is busy and organized. I have 
   developed a small guideline that can help pinpoint these leaders. 
   Incompetent Leaders will: 
   1. Delegate work rather than balance work loads. This allows all attention to be diverted 
   from them in case of failure. It may seem to them that are managing their people but in actuality 
   they are creating work imbalances within the group. It can create unnecessary overtime for some and 
   under utilization of others. A good manager is aware of the skill sets of all the people below them 
   and should allocate work accordingly while trying to enhance the skills of everyone to be even more 
   productive. 
   2. Reduce all answers to Yes or No rather than explaining their reasoning. This is an example 
   of a crisis manager who can not think farther than a few hours ahead. A yes/no manager finds it a 
   waste of time to find the real answer through intellectual thought. They are already thinking about 
   the next crisis. 
   3. Not separate personal life from professional life. They will bring their personal problem 
   to work. Working for these types of managers can be very dramatic. They are unable to separate their 
   emotional imbalances while trying to manage people. They are less focused and will not give you the 
   attention and direction you need for success. 
   4. Manage crisis. If you are a company that has crisis managers, then you can say goodbye 
   to innovation and progression. Proactive thinking is critical to the success of any company. If you 
   are not finding ways to stop or reduce the amount of crisis that has to be managed, then your competition 
   will pass you by. Leaders have to think out of the box and make change. 
   5. Create an environment where mistakes are unacceptable. Being held accountable for wrong 
   decisions is a fear for them. Making mistakes only helps you become a better person, manager, etc. 
   I use the analogy of a basketball player that has no fouls. If they are not going for the ball and 
   taking chances with their opponent, then they are trying hard enough. Take a chance and don't be 
   scared. 
   6. Humiliate or reprimand an employee within a group. This is a clear and visible sign 
   of a poor leader. A good leader takes employee problems away from a group setting to a more private 
   setting. If you have a boss that does this, it is time for a visit to human resources. 
   7. Not stand behind subordinates when they fail. Never leave your people to hang out to 
   dry. Always back them up, right, wrong, or indifferent. If an employee tries their best in a situation 
   and they fail to come through. They should be commended on their effort and not punished for the 
   failure 
   8. Encourage hard workers not smart workers. I am not impressed with hard workers.
   A hard worker is usually defined by hours. Smart workers 
   are the ones that I hire and embrace. Smart workers understand the concept of time management and 
   multi-tasking. Poor leaders miss this connection. Smart workers are methodical in their thinking 
   and can generally be successful because of their abilities management projects and time. Hard workers 
   may take twice as long to do the work. It is important to assign work accordingly to the skills and 
   personalities 
   9. Judge people on hours not performance. This is similar to #8. Again, I am not impressed 
   with overtime junkies. They have lost all perspective on a healthy family/balance. Bad managers will 
   promote the employees that work the most hours and not look at the smart ones who work less……….meaning 
   have better time management. Stop watching the lock. 
   10. Act differently in front of their leaders. This is an indication of low self-confidence. 
   They have doubts about their own ability to lead and they will act like little children when authority 
   is present. A confident person acts the same around everyone. Remember, have respect for them, but 
   also have self-respect. 
   Incompetent managers often make their subordinates' lives quite miserable and more senior managers 
   are often too slow in recognising the symptoms. Lower down the pecking order, it is more transparent 
   - as the incompetent manager is, surprisingly, willing to let down their guard. 
   Incompetence is something that is not picked up by conventional selection procedures and it is 
   certainly not visible at an interview. So what can you do to ensure that you do not recruit the incompetent?
   
   Well, the first thing is to put some rigour into your selection procedures. I am often astounded 
   by the fact that, with monotonous frequency, new employers rehire so many people who have frankly 
   failed in most of the roles they have assumed. 
   This has puzzled me for some time. Maybe the incompetent are attracted to fellow incompetents? 
   This was my first take on the subject (and one I think still holds water!) 
   But then the penny dropped. The sole thing about my sample is that once, or possibly even twice, 
   the incompetent person had worked for a very well known employer. They had then traded on this throughout 
   their career. 
   This is in some ways a replaying of the well known 'halo effect' - the phenomenon where, because 
   there appears to be one excellent thing about a person, everything else is equally excellent! Wish 
   this were true! 
   Research by eminent psychologists has identified seven themes associated with managers who fail. 
   These include: 
   The inability to delegate or prioritise 
   Adopting a reactive rather than proactive stance at work 
   Being poor at maintaining relationships and networks 
   Being poor at building teams 
   Demonstrating poor judgement 
   Being slow to learn new things 
   And they tend to have an overriding personality defect, which is often manifested by an individual 
   being insensitive, arrogant, cold, aloof and generally only 'out for number one'. 
   They are also poor performers, tending not to reach set objectives ever. 
   They also tend to betray people with regularity.
   
   Geoffrey King is a Director of Cambridge Recruitment Consultants. Contact him on
   [email protected] 
   
Softpanorama Recommended
   A surprisingly large number of people claim to have worked for a manager who was clearly incompetent.
   Some people even believe, that in certain sectors, the incompetent outnumber 
   the competent. 
   This book looks at when, why and how managers become incompetent and what to do about it. It does 
   so with both science and humour by reviewing what we know about competences, about personality theory 
   and about various salient psychiatric disorders. 
   So many management books are unrealistically optimistic. They portray management as a simple task 
   once one has absorbed the magic silver bullet message of the book. But managing people is, and will 
   remain difficult as any manager knows. Management is about ability and skills, attitude and values, 
   knowledge and understanding, but also about personality and mental stability. 
   This text investigates normal and abnormal incompetence. 
   The former is where people have a poor fit between themselves (personality and ability) and 
   the job. Through post selection, inadequate training, changes in the job or unwise promotion misfits 
   occur which leads to incompetence. 
   The longest chapter in the book looks at abnormal incompetence and what are called personality 
   disorders. Well-known psychiatric disorders are described in detail and how to spot these in managers. 
   Thus, the paranoid or sociopathic, narcissistic or passive-aggressive types are described in everyday 
   language as well as how to deal with them. More importantly, the book considers how the pathologically 
   incompetent managers influence organizations and groups to fulfil their often bizarre needs and wishes. 
   The final section of the book attempts to help the reader correctly diagnose incompetence. It also 
   offers various possible cures: the emphasis is that cure follows correct diagnoses. Some cures for 
   incompetence actually accentuate it. 
   The book is both serious and funny. The incompetent manager is no laughing matter for those managed 
   by them. But the sort of thing some incompetent managers believe and do can be, at least for the 
   onlooker, very funny indeed. 
   Part I - Incompetence at Work. 
   Chapter 1 Military and Management Incompetence. 
   Chapter 2 The Nature of Incompetence. 
   Chapter 3 Paradoxical Incompetence and Management Madness. 
   Chapter 4 The Concept of Competence. 
   Part II - The Causes of Incompetence. 
   Chapter 5 The Causes of Incompetencies: Personality Traits. 
   Chapter 6 Pathological Incompetence. 
   Chapter 7 Teams and Team Managers. 
   Part III - Curing the Problem. 
   Chapter 8 Possible Cures of Management Incompetence. 
   References. 
Urban 
Dictionary Pointy Haired Boss
   A sociopathic boss that is also the most inept, stupid human being alive.
   Refer's to Dilbert's 
   boss, but also by association to all other mindbogglingly 
   stupid bosses lacking foresight, technical knowledge, leadership skills,
   morality or tact. 
   "I'll get next weekend off, but I'll have to work on the
   PHB."
   "My new job's ok, except there's a classic
   Pointy 
   Haired Boss in my department."
Society
Groupthink :
Two Party System 
as Polyarchy : 
Corruption of Regulators :
Bureaucracies :
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	"The only thing that's noteworthy about Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer's recent
	disclosure 
	that the company has one million servers in its data centers is that he decided to disclose it - 
	most of the
	industry giants like to keep that information to themselves, says ITworld's Nancy Gohring. 
	
	But jMicrosoft's 
	one million servers what it means ITworldust for fun, Amazon Web Services engineer James 
	Hamilton did 
	the math: One million servers equals 15–30 data centers, a $4.25 billion capital expense, 
	and power consumption of 2.6TWh annually, or the amount of power that would be used by 230,000 
	homes in the U.S. Whether this is high or low, good or bad is impossible to know without 
	additional metrics."
	Anonymous Coward
	
		How much of that information is useful (Score:0) 
		And how much power is being wasted simply to keep the lights on and the disks spinning? 
		Amazon realized this and started AWS, but they're not off the hook either. 
	
	UnknowingFool
	
		Re:How much of that information is useful (Score:5, Insightful) 
		I would assume that most of the servers are probably doing web crawls for Bing so they 
		are working most of the time. Now I don't know if MS has heavily optimized their hardware 
		like Google did 
		[cnet.com] for efficiency.
	
	dimeglio
	
		Re: How much of that information is useful (Score:2) 
		Looks like Google has just as many
		
		servers  [slashdot.org]. As you said, Google's are optimized.
	
	Anubis IV
	
		Re:How much of that information is useful (Score:2) 
		They've already said that they'll have 300,000 servers backing the various services for 
		the Xbox One. Having another 700,000 on stuff like Bing, Outlook.com (née Hotmail), and 
		their various stores (music, video, apps, etc.) doesn't seem unreasonable, though it's hard 
		to say if it's a good use of that many, since I have no sense of what's appropriate when 
		we're talking about this sort of scale.
	
	amicusNYCL
	
		Re:How much of that information is useful (Score:2) 
		I wonder about this: 
		One million servers equals ... power consumption of 2.6TWh annually, or the amount of 
		power that would be used by 230,000 homes in the U.S. 
		So 1 home uses as much power as 4 servers? Are we talking about super high-powered 
		servers, or really low-powered homes? 
		-- "They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve 
		neither liberty nor safety." 
	
	viperidaenz
	
		Re:How much of that information is useful (Score:3) 
		That's around 30kWh per day. My house is currently consuming 40kWh, but its the middle of 
		winter here and my wife and son probably have the heater on. 
	
	NotQuiteReal
	
		Re:How much of that information is useful (Score:2) 
		Cross-check: 
		2.6E12 Wh / 230,000 = 11M Wh per house. 
		11 Mwh = 11,000 KWh, and that is about 20 cents per, (actually tiered from 10-30c). Or 
		$2200, or about $183 a month, which is a pretty fair estimate, for my bill. 
		And, yes, a couple of years ago when I retired a (work related) server I no longer 
		needed, my electric bill did go down by about $35/month - which is also in the ball park for 
		"4-ish servers" = a household worth of electricity.
	
	 
Digging through the transcript of Microsoft's recent Worldwide Partner Conference, a
number of
people 
paused at CEO Steve Ballmer's comment that the company now has one million servers. As interesting is 
that he said that Google has more and Amazon fewer, while other big names like Facebook and Yahoo are 
in the 100,000 ballpark.
 Let's dissect what matters:
--Does Ballmer know how Microsoft compares to his competitors? Probably not. As well-known
Amazon Web Services engineer James Hamilton 
notes, Amazon has never released a server count. Neither has Google, although two years ago a
Stanford professor deduced, based on official data about Google's data center energy output, that 
Google had around 900,000 servers. 
--What does the number mean about Microsoft data center efficiency? That's a tough one to answer. 
Microsoft's IaaS and PaaS services are dwarfed by AWS. Bing is dwarfed by Google. More than
300 million people use Outlook.com, but 100 million more use Gmail. 
Then there are Microsoft services, like Office 365 and other hosted enterprise software, that neither 
AWS or Google offer. 
Do all of Microsoft's flagging competitive services, like Azure and Bing, plus its enterprise services, 
add up to more workloads than AWS has? Or is Microsoft just really inefficient at running its data centers?
These are questions posed by Roger, in the comments after
Hamilton's 
blog post. He suggests we can't compare efficiency based on server numbers: "The numbers they should 
brag about are ratios – servers per system ops/admin person, annual power consumption per user, servers 
per user, etc." he wrote. 
--Regardless of the comparison, what more does the one million figure tell us about Microsoft's data 
center? Hamilton does the math for us. He figures that one million servers equals 15 – 30 data centers, 
a $4.25 billion capital expense, and power consumption of 2.6TWh annually, or the amount of power that 
would be used by 230,000 homes in the U.S. 
Those numbers are all huge, but plausible given Microsoft's size. 
--Should we care? Hamilton argues the number isn't useful "mostly because a single data point is 
open to a lot of misinterpretation by even skilled industry observers."
That said, apparently there's significant interest throughout the industry. Data Center Knowledge 
said that its page that lists the best information about
who has the most servers is one of its most popular. 
Take a look, it's very interesting to see the enormous differences in scale. Rackspace, for instance, 
has just 94,000 servers. In 2011, SoftLayer said it had 100,000. EBay has 54,000 servers, compared to 
Facebook's "hundreds of thousands." 
Ultimately, it's intriguing to find out how many servers Microsoft has, particularly because the 
giants in the industry are secretive about such data center metrics. But unless we have additional metrics, 
it's just too hard to draw any meaningful conclusions from the number. 
Read more of Nancy Gohring's "To the Cloud" blog 
and follow the latest IT news at ITworld. Follow Nancy on 
Twitter at @ngohring and on
Google+. For the latest 
IT news, analysis and how-tos, follow ITworld on Twitter 
and Facebook.
Good point about regular expressions ... and " We generally assume the problem is with whomever 
is asking the question"
	
	Last week I
	briefly departed from reality, thanks to the inexplicable actions of the CRTC, but this 
	week, I'm off the drugs and back on terra firma -- sort of. Anyway, to celebrate my return to 
	the land of the sane, I thought I'd tick off a few hallmarks of veteran Unix admins, so you have 
	a better chance of spotting these rare, beautiful creatures in the wild. Here is our song.
	... ... ... 
	Veteran Unix admin trait No. 3: We wield regular expressions like weapons
To the uninitiated, even the most innocuous regex looks like the result of nauseous keyboard. To 
	us, however, it's pure poetry. The power represented in the complexity of pcre (Perl Compatible 
	Regular Expressions) cannot be matched by any other known tool. If you need to replace every 
	third character in a 100,000-line file, except when it's followed by the numeral 4, regular 
	expressions aren't just a tool for the job -- they're the only tool for the job. Those 
	that shrink from learning regex do themselves and their colleagues a disservice on a daily 
	basis. In just about every Unix shop of reasonable size, you'll find one or two guys regex 
	savants. These poor folks constantly get string snippets in their email accompanied by plaintive 
	requests for a regex to parse them, usually followed by a promise of a round of drinks that 
	never materializes.
	Veteran Unix admin trait No. 4: We're inherently lazy
When given a problem that appears to involve lots of manual, repetitive work, we old-school Unix 
	types will always opt to write code to take care of it. This usually takes less time than the 
	manual option, but not always. Regardless, we'd rather spend those minutes and hours 
	constructing an effort that can be referenced or used later, rather than simply fixing the 
	immediate problem. Usually, this comes back to us in spades when a few years later we encounter 
	a similar problem and can yank a few hundred
	lines of 
	Perl from a file in our home directory, solve the problem in a matter of minutes, and go 
	back to analyzing other code for possible streamlining. Or playing Angry Birds.
	Veteran Unix admin trait No. 5: We prefer elegant solutions
If there are several ways to fix a problem or achieve a goal, we'll opt to spend more time 
	developing a solution that encompasses the actual problem and preventing future issues than 
	simply whipping out a Band-Aid. This is related to the fact that we loathe revisiting a problem 
	we've already marked "solved" in our minds. We figure that if we can eliminate future problems 
	now by thinking a few steps ahead, we'll have less to do down the road. We're usually right.
	Veteran Unix admin trait No. 6: We generally assume the problem is with whomever is 
	asking the question
To reach a certain level of Unix enlightenment is to be extremely confident in your foundational 
	knowledge. It also means we never think that a problem exists until we can see it for ourselves. 
	Telling a veteran Unix admin that a file "vanished" will get you a snort of derision. Prove to 
	him that it really happened and he'll dive into the problem tirelessly until a suitable, 
	sensible cause and solution are found. Many think that this is a sign of hubris or arrogance. It 
	definitely is -- but we've earned it.
	Veteran Unix admin trait No. 7: We have more in common with medical examiners than 
	doctors
When dealing with a massive problem, we'll spend far more time
	in the 
	postmortem than the actual problem resolution. Unless the workload allows us absolutely no 
	time to investigate, we need to know the absolute cause of the problem. There is no magic in the 
	work of a hard-core Unix admin; every situation must stem from a logical point and be traceable 
	along the proper lines. In short, there's a reason for everything, and we'll leave no stone 
	unturned until we find it.
	To us, it's easy to stop the bleeding by HUPping a process or changing permissions on a file 
	or directory to 777, but that's not the half of it. Why did the process need to be 
	restarted? That shouldn't have been necessary, and we need to know why.
	Veteran Unix admin trait No. 8: We know more about Windows than we'll ever let on
Though we may not run Windows on our personal machines or appear to care a whit about Windows 
	servers, we're generally quite capable at diagnosing and fixing Windows problems. This is 
	because we've had to deal with these problems when they bleed over into our territory. However, 
	we do not like to acknowledge this fact, because most times Windows doesn't subscribe to the 
	same deeply logical foundations as Unix, and that bothers us. See traits No. 5 and 6 above.
	This story, "Nine 
	traits of the veteran Unix admin," was originally published at
	InfoWorld.com. Read more of
	Paul Venezia's The Deep End 
	blog at InfoWorld.com. For the latest business technology news, follow
	InfoWorld.com on Twitter.
	
	For more than a decade, the most significant ritual in my work life has been to take on the most important task of the day 
	as my first activity, for 90 minutes, without interruption, followed by a renewal break. I do so because mornings are when 
	I have the highest energy and the fewest distractions. 
	... Far and away the biggest work challenges most of us now face are cognitive overload and difficulty focusing on one 
	thing at a time. 
	Whenever I singularly devote the first 90 minutes of my day to the most challenging or important task – they're often one and 
	the same - I get a ton accomplished. 
	Following a deliberate break – even just a few minutes - I feel refreshed and ready to face the rest of the day. When I don't 
	start that way, my day is never quite as good, and I sometimes head home at night wondering what I actually did while I was so busy 
	working. 
	Performing at a sustainably high level in a world of relentlessly rising complexity requires that we manage not just our time 
	but also our energy – not just how many hours we work, but when we work, on what and how we feel along the way.
	Fail to take control of your days - deliberately, consciously and purposefully - and you'll be swept along on a river of urgent 
	but mostly unimportant demands.
	It's all too easy to rationalize that we're powerless victims in the face of expectation from others, but doing that is itself 
	a poor use of energy. Far better to focus on what we can influence, even if there are times when it's at the margins. 
	Small moves, it turns out, can make a significant difference. 
	When it comes to doing the most important thing first each morning, for example, it's best to make that choice, along with your 
	other top priorities, the night before.
	Plainly, there are going to be times that something gets in your way and it's beyond your control. If you can reschedule for 
	later, even 30 minutes, or 45, do that. If you can't, so be it. Tomorrow is another day. 
	If you're a night owl and you have more energy later in the day, consider scheduling your most important work then. But weigh 
	the risk carefully, because as your day wears on, the number of pulls on your attention will almost surely have increased. 
	Either way, it's better to work highly focused for short periods of time, with breaks in between, than to be partially focused 
	for long periods of time. Think of it as a sprint, rather than a marathon. You can push yourself to your limits for short periods 
	of time, so long as you have a clear stopping point. And after a rest, you can sprint again. 
	How you're feeling at any given time profoundly influences how effectively you're capable of working, but most of us pay too 
	little attention to these inner signals.
	Fatigue is the most basic drag on productivity, but negative emotions like frustration, irritability and anxiety are equally 
	pernicious. A simple but powerful way to check in with yourself is to intermittently rate the quantity and quality of your energy 
	- say at midmorning, and midafternoon - on a scale from 1 to 10.
	If you're a 5 or below on either one, the best thing you can do is take a break. 
	Even just breathing deeply for as little as one minute – in to a count of three, out to a count of six – can quiet your mind, 
	calm your emotions and clear your bloodstream of the stress hormone cortisol.
	Learn to manage your energy more skillfully, and you'll get more done, in less time, at a higher level of focus. You'll feel 
	better - and better about yourself - at the end of the day. 
	About the Author 
	Tony Schwartz is the chief executive of the Energy Project and the author, most recently, of "Be Excellent at Anything: The 
	Four Keys to Transforming the Way We Work and Live." Twitter: @tonyschwartz
	Anne-Marie Hislop, Chicago 
	
		The key is figuring our when we are most productive and focused. Although a morning person, I need early time for my rituals 
		- exercise, shower, coffee, and NYT online (along with pop-ins at other sites). Then, by time I get to work around 8AM I will 
		have my most focused, productive hours.
		I also find that standing while I work on my computer, which I do more and more when I can (don't have a way to type 
		extensively while standing) energizes me and helps me focus. 
	
	John Lamont, Pennsylvania 
	
		Frankly I think the core premise of the article, how to get more "done", needs to be questioned, especially in the context 
		to which it speaks, the corporate environment. We would be far better served if Mr. Schwarz's audience spent that 1st 30 minutes 
		of their day sitting back and thinking about what they do, who it's really for, what are the consequences of what they and their 
		company do, and is it morally and ecologically ethical. 
		In the grand scheme of things I don't doubt mankind is now better off than it was 2,000 or even 500 years ago, but in our 
		relentless drive to produce, consume and sell we have developed, and continue to develop technologies and complex global social 
		interactions that have a good chance of setting us back to the stone age.
		Let's not be in such a hurry getting wherever we think we're going and spend a bit more time pondering about where it is 
		we actually want to be and who we want to be when we get there.
	
	 July 18, 2013 
	dbIII
	
		Since they do mail hosting (Score:2) 
		Since they do mail hosting that's probably half right and a large proportion of them are mail servers. It probably works well most of the time, but I've only ever been exposed to that side of their business due to an utterly stupid fuckup that took them a week to resolve because that's how long the trouble ticket queue is - that's how little respect they had for their client with more than twenty thousand email accounts. 
		
		I wasn't working for that client of theirs but instead trying to contact someone there while their Microsoft hosted email was down for a week.
	
	Decker-Mage 
	
		Re:How do you calculate space and power... (Score:2) 
		While running VMs is more flexible, is there too much overhead in the tradeoff? 
		Especially with a million servers and all. 
		Which does need some consideration. Supposedly, in a perfect virtualized environment 
		you'd see about 2-3% knocked off, in a headless configuration (no preferred guest OS VM 
		installed on top of the host) and with perfect loading. However it's an imperfect world and 
		no matter how you automagically mix and match loads, assuming it's allowed for those guests 
		(think HIPAA, etc.), you're going to see more inefficiency. How much? No one seems to be 
		releasing real numbers that I know of. It's quite literally a billion dollar question for 
		the host providers and perhaps a trillion dollar question for the world. 
		-- "The most deadly words for an engineer. 'I have an idea.'"
	
	 cusco
	
		Re:How do you calculate space and power... (Score:3) 
		Not really. Microsoft's Quincy data center started virtualizing servers and they saved so 
		much electricity that they didn't hit Bonneville Power Association's target energy usage to 
		qualify for the huge discount they normally get. 
		To make up the difference they opened all the vents in the middle of winter, turned the 
		heaters on full blast, and burned $70,000 in electricity in a week. The renegotiated the 
		next year's contract with the BPA so they haven't had to repeat that particular bit of 
		foolishness. 
		-- "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are 
		dumber than that." - George Carlin
	
	June 4, 2013 |
	Economist's 
	ViewQuick one, then I have to figure out how to get to Toulouse (missed connection, in Paris now ... but should be able to 
	get there ... long day so far):
	
		
			Is the Information Technology Revolution Over?, 
			by David M. Byrne, Stephen D. Oliner, and Daniel E. Sichel, FRB: Abstract: Given the slowdown in labor 
			productivity growth in the mid-2000s, some have argued that the boost to labor productivity from IT may have run its course. 
			This paper contributes three types of evidence to this debate. First, we show that since 2004, IT has continued to make 
			a significant contribution to labor productivity growth in the United States, though it is no longer providing the boost 
			it did during the productivity resurgence from 1995 to 2004. Second, we present evidence that semiconductor technology, 
			a key ingredient of the IT revolution, has continued to advance at a rapid pace and that the BLS price index for microprocesssors 
			may have substantially understated the rate of decline in prices in recent years. Finally, we develop projections of growth 
			in trend labor productivity in the nonfarm business sector. The baseline projection of about 1ľ percent a year is better 
			than recent history but is still below the long-run average of 2Ľ percent. However, we see a reasonable prospect--particularly 
			given the ongoing advance in semiconductors--that the pace of labor productivity growth could rise back up to or exceed 
			the long-run average. While the evidence is far from conclusive, we judge that "No, the IT revolution is not over."
	
	
	Comments
	Darryl FKA Ron said...
	
		The pickup reflects ongoing advances in IT and an assumption that those gains and innovations in other sectors spur some improvement 
		in multifactor productivity (MFP) growth outside of the IT sector relative to its tepid pace from 2004 to 2012.5 These developments 
		feed through the economy to provide a modest boost to labor productivity growth.[Using technology to replace people or make 
		them more productive, generally considered the same thing, is one form of productivity increasing technology integration. Automating 
		accounting functions from producing bills to meter reading or selling your goods on the WWW were examples of the revolution 
		of picking low hanging fruit. Using technology to manage systems in ways that people could not realistically accomplish is another 
		way of increasing productivity. From running power production and distribution, traffic lights, and just in time manufacturing 
		integrated with ERP accounting systems from order entry through to shipping and general ledger were other ways of increasing 
		productivity. The green fields of labor replacement have largely been sewn. The green fields of automated systems management 
		are without end. Economists have a limited lens into operations with metrics that often confuse value and price.]
	
	Darryl FKA Ron said in reply to Darryl FKA Ron...
	
		IOW, the MFP is underpriced because its marginal benefits get absorded by price competition.
	squidward said in reply to Darryl FKA Ron...
	
		Economists have a limited lens into operations with metrics that often confuse value and price.That can be very true when 
		looking at it qualitatively. Google or Amazon could be loading your browser with cookies and data mining your online habits 
		to maximize sales. Their increases in revenue don't help the average consumer much other than consume more. It's not quite the 
		same brave new world we had with the advent of online banking, bill paying and 24 hr shopping with home delivery. 
		I would have to agree that now marginal increases in productivity due to IT aren't giving the same marginal increases in 
		value to the end consumer. 
	
	john personna said...
	
		As I understand it, middle class incomes have fallen as productivity has risen. Doesn't that make a productivity centered view 
		much less interesting to compassionate observers?
	
	
	reason said in reply to john personna...
	
		Not sure, but it makes redistribution more interesting.
	Fred C. Dobbs said...
	
		Yesterday I watched three techs work for two hours to get a laser printer going again that had been working fine Friday, 
		but now was down due to 'network problems', so I would have to say, yeah, it could be over.
	
	
	Julio 
	said in reply to Fred C. Dobbs...
	
		I watched the same scene twenty years ago, and it was a crappy dot-matrix printer that cost ten times as much.What does it 
		all mean?
	
	john personna said in reply to
	Julio...
	
		I suspect that techs stretched out a ticket, then and now.
	Fred C. Dobbs said in reply to Fred C. Dobbs...
	
		Such problems, which are infrequent, seem to be invariably network-related. Network support techs
		are in short supply so 'everything else' is always tried first, even when that doesn't make much sense.
	
	KJMClark said... 
	
		If economists at the FRB are still getting paid to ruminate on whether the IT revolution is over, then the IT revolution 
		is not over. We'll know it's nearly over when we're replacing all but the top level of economists with intelligent software. 
		(The top level will be helping the top-level software developers write the software.) We'll know it's completely over when the 
		politicians decide we've had enough of the experiment of replacing people with machines. Or, rather, when we get the intelligent 
		machines' responses to the politicians saying we're done. 
	
	ezra abrams said...
	
		ya know, if u economist ever got outta yr offices, and did some real work...
		You would find that the gains yet to be realized from the IT revolution are IMMENSE
		People like myself, highly paid and educated PhDs, we can all be dispensed with
		or, how about an earpiece that in real time tells a trial lawyer, *while s/he is in court*, what ruling he needs to cite to 
		rebut a just made oral argument...
		or CAD software that allows automotive design engineers to shave 10% of the weight of a car in an iteritve fashion (lower 
		the weight of one component; therefore suspension can be less sturdy, in turn you then need less horsepower due to the lower 
		wieght...)
		or software that can solve Navier stokes for non laminair flow at high reynolds number
		i mean, seriously, the it revolution is over ?
		I'm sure they said the same thing about RailRoads and the tansportation revolution in, say 1890
	
	jt said...
	
		Couldn't automation lead to declining gross productivity via underemployment of displaced workers into low productivity jobs 
		(services)? In fact, one could argue that the dual mandate of monetary policy will produce exactly this outcome. Labor income 
		distributions seem to confirm this split in the labor market. The more interesting comparison, is in industry that use a lot 
		of IT, has their productivity improved?
	
	Michael Gamble:
		Computer technology with out software is just a paperweight. The technology revolution is stalled but not over. The problem 
		as I see it and it seems to be everywhere is not nearly enough people paying for custom software development done in house.
		
		Every company any bigger than a few employees needs someone on staff who manages software purchases, installation and the 
		creation of custom software to make the bridge between a lot of chimerical software, but no one wants to pay for it.
		I don't blame them mind you there has been a lot of over hyping going on by the big players in the industry for years. And 
		looking around you would think your entire business could be run from your phone with all the advertising, technology and hype 
		put in to mobile phones? 
	
	Observer said in reply to Michael Gamble...
	
		I used to lead teams that built custom software for internal use. The ROI can be high under the right conditions, but Commercial 
		Off The Shelf is often a better solution. It depends. My off the cuff guess is that custom is hard to justify for a small 
		business, except in very special cases.Custom software that actually supports business critical processes tends to be quite 
		expensive, with reason. 
		Another reason to avoid custom software is risk mitigation. A business that relies on software built by one "someone 
		on staff" is running a real risk if/when that someone leaves. 
		Part of the unwillingness to pay is that people's expectations are influenced by consumer software price points, $0 to a 
		few hundred dollars. 
	
	Jerry said...
	
		A secondary inhibiter might be the growing mess in the software patent world. There seems to be an increasing reluctance to 
		make an investment because of the patent toes that might get tweaked.
	squidward said in reply to Jerry...
	
		This is very true, the whole tech industry is a mess with antiquated patent law. You have to wonder how many products aren't 
		being brought to market because a smaller company can't afford to get in a heavy weight patent brawl a la Samsung v. Apple.
		
		I'm no expert but I have always wondered why writing code isn't more analogous to copyrighting than inventing and patenting. 
		If we could incentivize more open source we could have more innovation. 
	
	Second Best said...
	
		For the US, much of the IT revolution was over after the major carriers killed the internet revolution in its tracks, and 
		it ain't coming back anytime soon.
		See 'Captive Audience' by Susan Crawford.
	
	kievite said...
	
		Situation is enterprise datacenters definitely corresponds to definition of stagnation. We see a lot of cost cutting. 
		Percentage of custom software is small and getting smaller as Observer already noted above. Programmers are disappearing 
		from the enterprise IT departments. 
		At the same time a new dangerous trend is in place. Some "of-the-shelf" packages on which enterprise depends are problematic 
		with some subsystems close to junk or even harmful (SAP/R3, some IBM products, etc). Moreover there is now a new type of enterprise 
		software vendors who are specializing in selling completely useless or even harmful software on the pure strength of marketing 
		(plus fashion). Vendor which try to capitalize on ignorance of a typical IT management layer.
		Like Kolmogorov once said "You 
		can't overestimate the level of ignorance of the audience". That was about different audience, but fully applicable here. So 
		snake oil salesmen in IT are making good money, may be better than honest sailmen. 
		But the problems with "off-the-shelf" packages are increasing due to their often unwarranted complexity (which serves mainly 
		as barrier of entry for competitors), or just complexity for the sake of complexity. 
		This and the fact that generally software is a the most complex artifact invented by mankind lead to the level of understanding 
		of existing packages and operating systems that can be called dismal. Even people who "should know" often look like coming from 
		the pages of "The Good Soldier Švejk" or "Catch 22". One Unix group manager in a large company that I used to know for example 
		did not understand the fact that IBM Power servers and Intel servers are based on CPU with two different architectures. When 
		at the meeting I realized that my jaw simply dropped. 
		People who saw the software evolution from its humble beginning and can understand internals and nature of compromises taken 
		in existing hardware and software are now close to retirement and in the new generation such people are exceedingly rare.
		
		That is true for operating systems such as Linux or Solaris, this is even more true for web-related software such as Apache, 
		MediaWiki, Frontpage, etc. As a result a lot of things are "barely run" and a lot of system are bought just because people have 
		no clue that already bought systems can perform the same functions. 
		This is also true about Office, especially Excel. One think that I noticed that the level of knowledge of Excel is really 
		dismal across the enterprise. I would agree with "squidward" that for office (but only for office) "I would have to agree that 
		now marginal increases in productivity due to IT aren't giving the same marginal increases in value to the end consumer. ". 
		But that's for office only. Cars, homes, etc are still "terrra incognita". 
		But while internally everything looks rotten, externally situation looks different: there is unending assault of automation 
		on existing jobs. So JT is on something when he asks the question "The more interesting comparison, is in industry that use 
		a lot of IT, has their productivity improved?" Yes and to the extend that many workforce cuts are permanent and moreover cuts 
		might continue. 
		As for statement "For the US, much of the IT revolution is over" I doubt it. Computer will continue to eat jobs. The "cutting 
		edge" simply moved elsewhere and one hot area are various robotic systems. Here is one example:
		
			"IBM is using robots based on iRobot Create, a customizable version of the Roomba vacuum cleaner, to measure temperature 
			and humidity in data centers. The robot looks for cold zones (where cold air may be going to waste instead of being directed 
			to the servers) and hotspots (where the air circulation may be breaking down. IBM is putting the robots to commercial use 
			at partners - while EMC is at an early stage on a strikingly similar project."
		
		Both home and datacenter are huge application areas. Even in consumer electronics what we have is still very primitive in 
		comparison with what is possible on the current hardware. That is true for smartphones, tablets and other mass gargets. And 
		it is even more true for home. For example for older people a cutting edge computer technology can probably provide the level 
		of service comparable with the level of service of nursing home. Automated cook who accepts a simple menu and deliver dishes 
		is already feasible automation. Currently the cost will be high but gradually it will drop and quality of service improves. 
		
		One interesting area is saving energy. How many people here have home network which integrates thermostat, outdoor and indoor 
		lights, and security system. And probably nobody here has computer automated shades on windows. 
		Autonomous datacenters with robot service are in my opinion an interesting development which in many cases can serve as "distributed 
		cloud". 
	
	Sunny Liu said in reply to kievite...
	
		I agree. That was a wonderfully informative post, and thank you for that. I also don't think it's even close to over not 
		just because of robotics but also because of machine learning. The implications for data mining and big data are enormous, and 
		the research being done in those fields are still yet to be fully utilized. 
		Right now, machine learning and big data are advancing 
		research in biology, but what about the optimizations possible in pharmaceuticals or manufacturing? 
	
	geoff 
	
		not sure if this qualifies as IT. Not even sure if that is a meaningful distinction, but as a distributor I can't help 
		thinking that 3D printers will have a profound impact on both manufacturing and distribution. 
		
		
		http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-05-16/bloomberg-view-why-3d-printing-can-make-the-world-a-better-place 
		
		The issue now becomes whether the technology will transform manufacturing more broadly. At the moment, 3D printing is a 
		small part of the economy. The printers are typically slow, and the material they use is expensive and inconsistent. As the 
		industry advances, however, printing on demand could reduce assembly lines, shorten supply chains, and largely erase the 
		need for warehouses for many companies. Cutting back on shipping and eliminating the waste and pollution of traditional 
		manufacturing could be an environmental boon.
	
	Kaleberg 
	
		The software revolution is over, just the same way the written word revolution ended in 1900.
	
	Tom Shillock:
	
		Does increased labor productivity increase living standards? What if the products are lower quality and either must be 
		disposed of sooner than if they were of higher quality or incur greater lifecycle service costs than if they were of higher 
		quality? If increased productivity degrades the natural environment (air, water, soil, food) are living standards increased? 
		If productivity numbers increase because more people are unemployed or under employed or suffer stagnant or lower wages from 
		globalization has the standard of living increased? 
		Looking at aggregate data glosses losers and winners. For the last three decades the winners are relatively fewer in 
		number but grabbing a greater share of GDP, while the loser are vastly greater in number and have fewer opportunities to be 
		winners other than through random luck (marriage, inheritance, connections). 
		Is IT innovation necessarily good or more productive? The increase in semiconductor performance (pick your metric) at a 
		given price, or even lower price, will not increase productivity if you already have all the IT performance you can use. In 
		some cases, it might reduce productivity. E.g., having larger hard drives means more data will be collected (data collects 
		to fill the space available: Shillock's Second Law of Storage). Unless one has efficient methods to keep track of it all 
		then searching for it will reduce productivity. Also, access and seek times have not improved linearly with capacity. 
		Another hit to productivity from IT. This is why the Fed's incorporation of a "hedonic index" for microprocessors into its 
		price index muddies the water (c.f. p. 8) 
		What if some IT innovation gives a company a competitive edge such as happened in finance? Others are compelled to adopt 
		it ASAP but that does not necessarily make the financial industry more productive. Indeed, it facilitated fraud on a massive 
		scale that caused the Great Recession while leaving insiders vastly wealthier for it. It could be argued that IT innovations 
		have facilitated the increasing and increasingly server financial crises over the past three decades, if only because they 
		create the delusion among users that they know more than they do thereby feeding their hubris. 
		The Dictatorship of Data 
		http://www.technologyreview.com/news/514591/the-dictatorship-of-data/ 
		Most of the gains to productivity from IT are in two areas. First, is that large financial and reservation systems. These 
		run on IBM mainframes. The second is the application of smaller computers to manufacturing to run tools. The vast amount of 
		PC level IT probably reduces productivity because most people do not know how to use it. Word processors allow more people 
		to take more time making their emails and interoffice memos grammatically better and with fewer spelling errors. Most people 
		have little clue how to use spreadsheets, even Rinehart and Rogoff were challenged. PowerPoint and similar PC apps are great 
		for enabling the incompetent and ignorant to appear otherwise, which accounts for their popularity. They are the lingua 
		franca of IBM. So far Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, etc. are a great waste of time for the neurotically self-conscious and 
		self-important. 
		Economics is a literary genre in which contestants focus only on the numbers and usually those they like then use their 
		imaginations to spin stories about the numbers. Audiences then vote on which story they find most pleasing. 
	
	April 30, 2013 by
	James 
	Kwak |
	18 Comments 
	By James KwakYesterday's Wall Street Journal had an article titled "Foosball 
	over Finance" about how people in finance have been switching to technology startups, for all the predictable reasons: The long 
	hours in finance. "Technology is collaborative. In finance, it's the opposite." "The prospect of 'building something new.'" Jeans. 
	Foosball tables. Or, in the most un-self-conscious, over-engineered, revealing turn of phrase: "The opportunity of my generation 
	did not seem to be in finance."
	We have seen this before. Remember Startup.com? That film documented the travails of a banker who left Goldman to start an online 
	company that would revolutionize the delivery of local government services. It failed, but not before burning through tens of millions 
	of dollars of funding. There was a time, right around 1999, when every second-year associate wanted to bail out of Wall Street and 
	work for an Internet company.
	The things that differentiate technology from banking are always the same: the hours (they're not quite as bad), the work environment, 
	"building something new," the dress code, and so on. They haven't changed in the last few years. The only thing that changes are 
	the relative prospects of working in the two industries-or, more importantly, perceptions of those relative prospects.
	Wall Street has always attracted a particular kind of person: ambitious but unfocused, interested in success more than any 
	achievements in particular, convinced (not entirely without reason) that they can do anything, and motivated by money largely as 
	a signifier of personal distinction. If those people want to work for technology startups, that means two things. 
	
		- First, they think they can amass more of the tokens of success in technology than in finance.
 
		- Second-since these are the some of the most conservative, trend-following people that exist-it means they're buying at the 
		top.
 
	
	
	Posted by Soulskill 
	Orome1 writes
		"The number of IT professionals considering leaving their job due to workplace stress has jumped from 69% last year to 
		73%. One-third of those surveyed cited dealing with managers as 
		their most stressful job requirement, particularly for IT staff in larger organizations. Handling end user support requests, 
		budget squeeze and tight deadlines were also listed as the main causes of workplace stress for IT managers. Although users are 
		not causing IT staff as much stress as they used to, it isn't stopping them from creating moments that make IT admins want to 
		tear their hair out in frustration. Of great concern is the impact that work stress is having on health and relationships. While 
		a total of 80% of participants revealed that their job had negatively impacted their personal life in some way, the survey discovered 
		some significant personal impact: 18% have suffered stress-related health issues due to their work, and 28% have lost sleep 
		due to work."
	
	Culture20:
	
		Re:IT admins are special (Score:5, Insightful)
		
			lots of jobs really suck, and lots of people are stressed to the point of health impacts and have considered 
			quitting. Many of these jobs pay significantly less than IT wages.
		
		Whenever I get stressed out, I remember the jobs I did before/while I was in college, and I'm happy to be where 
		I am. I can't imagine what today's grads do without any work experience at low-wage McJobs. Consider quitting I guess?
	
	datavirtue:
	
		Re:IT admins are special (Score:4, Insightful)
		Admin is just a step up from help desk, hang out too long and it will begin to suck badly. If you fail to increase 
		your skills (most admins) and your ability to add value, then it will start to suck badly after a number of years--it's boring.
		
		How many servers can you provision or user accounts can you setup before pulling your fucking hair out? 
		Learn to code, become a professional DBA, or acquire some more skills that makes you valuable, like perhaps getting 
		involved with business intelligence. 
		Admins are a commodity. Yes, it is easy to hang out and collect a paycheck, but don't whine when your value wanes 
		and people direct you around like a monkey boy.
	
	i kan reed 
	
		Re:IT admins are special (Score:5, Insightful)
		As an software engineer(and thus not an IT admin), IT admins have it much worse than most middle class office workers. 
		They get shit on over the smallest thing, and are the only IT employees who are expected to deliver within minutes of being 
		asked. I don't think it's a stretch to say their stress levels might be higher than yours.
	
	jedidiah 
	
		Re:IT admins are special (Score:5, Interesting)
		In terms of certain job expectations they are. These include longer hours and working weekends and during the 3rd 
		shift.
		A lot of mundanes don't understand this. They hear that you've got some office job and they don't understand why you would be 
		working those kinds of hours.
		Clueless spouses can add to the stress level. Even spouses that are part of the workforce can be ignorant and unsympathetic.
	
	jellomizer 
	
		Re:IT admins are special (Score:4, Funny)
		No your wife will not understand no matter what your job is. She will undoubtedly have worked more then you did, 
		no matter what.
	
	h4rr4r:
	
		 That is only $48k. That is terrible pay for sysadmin work.
	
	Shadow99_1 
	
		Personally I was supporting Windows, Linux, and Apple... So no, not just windows. I also was not the only one, 
		I worked with admins from a dozen companies from time to time and pay varied from $40k-55k. Those making $55k were in their 
		50's and had started (often at these companies) during the 70's or at most 80's...
	
	ZaMoose:
	
		Lying liars and the lies they lie about (Score:5, Informative)
		Only 73% have considered quitting? The other 27% are lying to you, probably because they're worried that the survey 
		is being snooped on by the corporate Barracuda firewall.
	
	Spy Handler
	
		Rapid change in IT is the problem (Score:3)
		When IT and computer/internet field in general settle down and become mature, things will get better.
		Right now there's just too many new technolgies and buzzwords and platforms and architecture and paradigms popping up, and pointy-haired 
		managers and VPs all want to implement this and that and oh by the way make it work with our legacy system and nothing better 
		get lost or you're fired.
	
	Yold
	
		Re:Rapid change in IT is the problem (Score:5, Insightful)
		It's not a matter of maturity. Many organizations hide behind the disclaimer "we are not an I.T. company", despite 
		having sizable I.T. departments. And despite having this sizable department, which offers mission-critical applications and 
		infrastructure, zero effort is made towards working smarter. Problems are fixed with mandatory overtime, cutting staffing/costs, 
		and "quick-and-dirty" fixes to long standing problems.
		I think some companies are starting to understand that their project management methodologies are flawed, but most cannot connect 
		the concepts of "software debt" to decreasing marginal output in their I.T. efforts. An hour of work today is less effective 
		than in the past because you are paying "interest" on your previous bad decisions.
		I think that the 27% is reflective of companies that can connect the longevity and cost-effectiveness of I.T. systems to proper 
		project planning, management, and I.T. expertise. Whether or not this is an upper-bound remains to be seen, because a lot of 
		organizations simply don't understand that inventing your own project management ideas dooms you to repeating the same failures 
		that have happened over the last 50 years.
	
	meatspray 
	
		Thats why your #1 priority in an interview is: (Score:5, Insightful)
		Picking your boss. If you're not up a creek looking for work, that interview is to let you meet your managers, 
		talk to some workers about the managers.
		When I started working it was "If I can just get in the door"
		When I was in my 20's it was "What cool things will this job do for me"
		Now That i'm in my 30's its "Will I be able to work with these people"
	
	Midnight_Falcon 
	
		It's about being "Always on" (Score:5, Insightful)
		 I'm an IT professional and more than once I've thought about quitting, especially when I was doing high-stress 
		consulting. Clients treat you like meat, like "the help." They have no problem waking you up at 5AM with nonsense problems.
		If you don't answer and do it politely, they call your boss and then your job/livelihood is in jeopardy.
		
		This isn't just a 9-5 thing where, when you leave the office, you're no longer on the hook -- it's always happening. Sometimes, 
		you're at a bar at 10PM and you get an urgent call -- pick it up, and you in your tipsy state are now on the hook to resolve 
		an important issue. 
		The fear of getting these calls has made me stay home sometimes when I could have been being social, and not travel 
		away on vacation when I knew some action was going on I'd be needed for. It creates a lot of stress to be depended on so much, 
		and now with telecommuting, you're expected to be responsive at all times wherever you are.
		It's a lot of stress even in the best setup/most-redundant environments, and the job is not for everyone. And when 
		projects come up that are difficult and highly user-facing, it's hard to avoid this type of a situation.
	
	mjr167
	
		Re:It's about being "Always on" (Score:2)
		How is that different from being... a doctor, a fireman, a nuclear plant operator, a plumber, or an electrical 
		line repairman?
		Welcome to the world of essential services. When your job is to keep things working, you don't get to pick your hours cause 
		shit happens.
	
	Another Ex-IBMer says:
	April 18, 2012 at 9:28 am 
	The current level of EPS was reached by a combination of two things: (1) offshoring jobs and (2) killing the pension fund (IBM 
	stopped contributing to its pension fund in 2007 – all subsequent benefit dollars have gone into 401k plans). Lots of other shenanigans 
	too of course, documented well in the book "Retirement Heist: How Companies Plunder and Profit from the Nest Eggs of American Workers" 
	by Ellen Schultz. 
	Since (2) has already been done, to redouble EPS again to $20 per share will require an even greater rate of US job elimination 
	than we have seen in the past.
	They have also done other little things. Yes, retirees can purchase health insurance through IBM, but retirees are placed into 
	their own insurance pool rather than being co-insured with all employees. Result: (much) higher rates. Result of higher rates: retirees 
	cannot afford health insurance ==> retirees die sooner ==> lower pension costs for IBM ==> higher EPS!
	
		-  gavin says:
		
April 21, 2012 at 1:43 pm 
		I'm amazed that IBM offers former employees health insurance at all. The trend is not to insure anyone who isn't currently 
		employed, and then offer only scant overpriced difficult to collect insurance. 40,000 Americans die for lack of health care 
		every year in a health care system ranked 37 in the world after all other developed countries. So ex-IBM employees seem to have 
		it better than most.
		
			-  sadIBMer says:
			
April 22, 2012 at 8:33 am 
			If the US is ranked 37, why do people from almost every other country come to the US for health care? Doesn't make sense 
			to me.
			
				-  gavin says:
				
April 22, 2012 at 11:03 am 
				There are certain clinics that cater to the megarich that provide "the best" care. Corrupt elites from all over the 
				world come to get treatment there for certain conditions. Other such clinics exist for other conditions in other parts 
				of the world. Average people in your country couldn't afford them even with insurance. I think most Americans understand 
				that they are going to be getting the 37th in the world treatment…or worse. It's well recognized that most rural areas 
				in the U.S. have treatment standards lower than many third world countries.
				
					-  Ronc says:
					
April 22, 2012 at 2:08 pm
					
					The clinics exist because they are allowed to exist and thrive. That fact pushes medical progress forward which 
					eventually benefits others just like any other technology.
  
				
				 
				-  Seenitall says:
				
April 30, 2012 at 5:23 pm 
				That ranking of 37th is based on the WHO formula of 'consistency over quality'. Since the US has the greatest healthcare 
				in the world, when you can afford it, yet offers only minimal coverage for it's poor, the disparity gives the US a poor 
				ranking. IOW, a country can have very poor healthcare, but if it's consistent for all of the population, the country 
				will receive a high rank.
 
					-  jim says:
					
October 4, 2012 at 6:58 pm
					
					The WHO ranking takes into account such factors as %insured, infant mortality,life expectancy, etc. The US does 
					not rank in the top 5 in any of these categories, yet has a cost per individual and percent of GDP allocated to 
					health care much higher than other developed countries. The health care most middle class Americans receive is no 
					better, but more expensive than their counterparts in Europe and Japan. The care provided to the poor is well below 
					the standard in developed countries.
					 
				
				 
			
			 
		
		 
	
	Interview 
	With A Digital Migrant Meet John Hunter - Unchartered Waters
	
		John Hunter 
		"Move to low cost-of-living area of the world, set up shop working remote, work ten hours a week 
		while building a huge nest egg." 
		Whole books have been published on this model, along with terms like "The Nouveau Rich", people who get to earn wealth while 
		enjoying the easy life. 
		And yet … 
		It seems to never actually happen. 
		Or, at least, it doesn't seem to happen much. Often the people living the "Jimmy Buffett Life" are already millionaires living 
		off interest. Often the person speaking is selling something (perhaps a dream) more than a reality. We can do better. 
		Then I met John Hunter and learned about his technology business. 
		John is not independently wealthy. He did not have a big IPO, and does not have have a revenue stream. Nor does he have a 
		best-selling book on, say, how to live cheap.
		Instead, he was a practicing programmer and IT program manager who moved from Virginia to Malaysia, on the expectation of 
		taking a year long "sabbatical," and, if he could find a way to make it work, to stay a bit longer. 
		And Now. John has been in Malaysia for a bit over a year now, with no sign of returning anytime soon. 
		I thought he was worth talking to, and sharing here.
	
	 
	
	by Stiletto
	(12066) writes:
	on Monday March 18, @06:44PM (#43208399)
			
	
		It's not causal. Working long hours does not cause you to be highly paid or wealthy. If that were true, all a vegetable 
				picker would have to do is work 120 hours a week and retire in comfort. A CEO does not make 800X what his average staff 
				makes because he works 800 times as long.
		Sadly, on average, the most accurate predictor of someone's income is their father's income.
	
	Re:30 hours per week? (Score:5, Insightful)
	by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 18, @08:33PM (#43209445) 
	
		It does if you count high school and college and grad school. Tell me, how hard do you think those vegetable pickers were 
		working when they were 16? Were they staying late after school to learn Calculus, or were they cutting class to get high with 
		their homies? Working hard and being smart actually matter. Anyone who says otherwise has never tried either working hard or 
		being smart.
	
	They were probably too busy picking vegetables at 16. They probably study when they can. College? Grad School? With fruit pickin' 
	parents? You really are disconnected from the real world down here aren't you.
	Funny, most business owners/CEO's I've met are decent with basic algebra but weak when it comes to calculus, trig, etc.
	A.) They know people. (usually part of a boys club at an expensive university)
	B.) Have rich fathers
	C.) Work hard.
	Pick any two of the above and it will fit most CEO's... they also have to be willing to make hard choices at the expense of others 
	to further their agenda.... or perform some CYA.
	
		No, it's because what he knows is 800x as valuable. Not all work is equal. That's one of the many flaws in Marx's philosophy.
	
	So Carly Fiorina's contributions were worth more than a seasoned electronics engineer with 25 years of experience? I think not.
	A CEO is a corporate face undeserving of being put on a pedestal unless they built the company they are running with their bare 
	hands in the beginning.
	
		Sadly, on average, the most accurate predictor of someone's income is their father's income.
		That's because income is dependent on intelligence and hard work. Intelligence is highly heritable and appreciation for hard 
		work is handed down in successful families.
	
	Spoken like a true wannabe aristocrat. The possibility of being intelligent may be inherited, but actual intelligence isn't. 
	Most trust fund babies I've ever met have been pretty useless except for office political gain. Breeding has nothing to do with 
	being fit for the job.
	The hard work that's handed down is soaked in the blood of the people who actually worked for it that were desperate enough to allow 
	themselves to be exploited.
	
	Re:30 hours per week? (Score:5, Funny) 
	by ColdSam (884768) on Monday March 18, @08:55PM (#43209631) 
	
		Ok let's test you theory: 
		Nicely done. Your rigorous analysis sure proved him wrong. 
		It takes skill, hard work, ruthless ambition and extreme good luck to get rich and stay there. 
		Is it okay if we use your method on your own theory?
		 Paris Hilton - nope 
		George Bush - nope
	
	gordo3000 Re:30 hours per week? (Score:3) 
	
		do you have any sources that say the majority of wealth in this country was inherited? A skimming the forbes richest list 
		show quite a few people who didn't get there via just cashing an inheritance and others who did (walton's family, as the obvious 
		top examples). 
		I've generally found in 3rd world countries the amount that inheritance matters and who you know matters far more than in 
		the US. In fact, I think the US is the most democratic on this (I've traveled quite a bit and lived abroad, but I've never done 
		hard research, so I'm not saying this is research). But that is relative across countries, to speak towards working towards 
		your wealth and inheriting in an absolute manner is a hard research question. here is what I mean: 
		Most upper income people I know got there by hard work, but that is not saying parents didn't help them a lot and that those 
		advantages can be passed down. I know doctors and lawyers (as two high income profession classes), all worked hard to get there, 
		some had lots of family money getting them through, others didn't. What I have found is that having family money helps make 
		up for lower qualifications, making upper income a sticky level to be at (though this doesn't speak to super rich families where 
		children never need to work). A great example is poor performance in college. Upper income people can afford to have their children 
		stay in college longer, pay more for tuition, or send them abroad for medical school to get them to being a doctor. Lower income 
		people just have to fight it out onshore.
	
	
	Re:30 hours per week? (Score:4, Interesting) 
	by SpaceMonkies (2868125) on Monday March 18, @09:19PM (#43209821) 
	
		If you can make $15/hr remotely, I'd suggest Montenegro. Find a place near the sea, you got it made. You might have to work 
		at getting a really great broadband deal, but there are some to be had. If you're single, the women there are beautiful and 
		have sexy accents, you've got the sea and off-season the tourists go away and you can really enjoy the good life. You're a short 
		hop from shopping in Italy, skiing in the Alps and you're still not in the EU (yet). Learn to play tuba in a Balkan horn band. 
		Drink lots of coffee and slivovitza. Go out in your backyard and pick fresh figs for breakfast. Even if swimming in crystal-blue 
		seas is not your idea of fun, you can set yourself down in a sidewalk cafe and watch one Mila Jovovic after another walk by. 
		And there's none of the snobbiness of Western Europe. 
	
	Re: 
	
		I know that a lot of janitors/custodial service as well as bus drivers that do that. Some people in retail and "health care"/assisted 
		living places work that much too. White collar workers mostly have it "easier" because their jobs pay far more. 50 hours is 
		a bit low, since many of them work weekends too. 
	
	udachny
	
		Entrepreneurs! 
	
	
		Entrepreneurs never stop working, off hours, weekends, holidays, those are just words, they don't mean anything when you 
		run a business. 
	
	ph1ll  
	
		... and I can't find a country called Malysia (please note, editors: it's Malaysia). 
		I know Malaysia well (even though I live in the UK). I first went there in '97 and married a Malaysian-born woman. Some observations: 
		They really like and respect white people. They don't particularly like Chinese people (my wife is half Chinese so I see rampant 
		discrimination against this large minority - about 25% of Malaysia's population - all the time). The weather is great (although 
		sometimes a little too humid). 
		Kuala Lumpur is a very advanced city that can compare to anything in the West. Broadband speeds are so-so according to my 
		cousin-in-law. There appears to be a demand for good engineers (according to another cousin-in-law, a Chinese who studied IT 
		in England). So, assuming you can get a visa, getting some interesting work shouldn't be too hard. The political situation there 
		is... interesting. But I get the impression that if you don't cause trouble you will be left alone - especially if you are white.
		
		HTH
	
	
	Re:What article (Score:5, Interesting) 
	tlhIngan:
	
		I know Malaysia well (even though I live in the UK). I first went there in '97 and married a Malaysian-born woman. Some observations: 
		They really like and respect white people. They don't particularly like Chinese people (my wife is half Chinese so I see rampant 
		discrimination against this large minority - about 25% of Malaysia's population - all the time). The weather is great (although 
		sometimes a little too humid). Kuala Lumpur is a very advanced city that can compare to anything in the West. Broadband speeds 
		are so-so according to my cousin-in-law. There appears to be a demand for good engineers (according to another cousin-in-law, 
		a Chinese who studied IT in England). So, assuming you can get a visa, getting some interesting work shouldn't be too hard. 
		The political situation there is... interesting. But I get the impression that if you don't cause trouble you will be left alone 
		- especially if you are white. 
		HTH 
		The reason is that after the war or so, the first people to start running businesses and such were Chinese (most likely chased 
		out from Singapore by the Japanese), and they got very rich doing so. 
		The government exploits the fact that a lot of Malaysians are jealous of the Chinese for being successful (which happens 
		because they worked hard at building businesses and such) , so they put up huge campaigns of national identity and such to encourage 
		hatred of the Chinese. However, they government doesn't really do anything about it (they can't - said Chinese businesses pay 
		a good amount of tax and employ a lot of Malays). So basically the Chinese are demonized for being successful and "exploiting" 
		Malays 
		If you're white, you're usually a tourist or an investor, so you're treated well to get at your $$$. If you're a Chinese 
		investor with $$$, everyone eyes you like you're going to enslave them. 
		The government feeds off this sentiment and basically just fans the flames. There's no real democracy (there is voting, but 
		the opposition is usually highly discredited, or even arrested if they have a chance of winning - being a Muslim state, there 
		are plenty of "crimes" that one can accuse the Opposition of).
	
	Kagato
	
		That closes the loop on what I noticed about the Chinese in Singapore hating the Japanese. I actually witnessed a shop keeper 
		play dumb with a Japanese trying to buy something using Engrish. Old Japanese guy stormed out in frustration. I go to buy something, 
		no problem, he explained the other guy was Japanese.
		I don't know if I would choose Malaysia or Singapore though. Both are kind of strict countries if you run afoul of the local 
		powers that be. Fun to visit, not so much on the living there. I'd hit up Belize. Nice locals, cheap and only 1 hour plane ride 
		to Miami if the shit goes down.
 
	
	Think twice before ratting anyone out
	When you're working for someone who isn't getting the job done, it can be tempting to go to your boss's boss or another leader in 
	the organization. First consider the consequences. "Hierarchy is alive and well. And this person has more power than you do. If 
	you're going to expose them, you need to understand the political current in your organization," warns McKee. People at the top 
	of an organization may feel threatened if they see someone trying to take down their peer and may be unwilling to help. Useem agrees. 
	"It's hazardous to speak up in a very pragmatic sense. If it becomes known that it was you, who's going to be the first to go?" 
	he says. So if you do decide to formally complain, he advises doing it carefully. Test the waters with someone you trust before 
	going to HR or a superior. 
	Both McKee and Useem emphasize that there are times when you are obligated to speak up. "In extreme circumstances, if the boss 
	is involved in malfeasance, you have a duty to act," says Useem. In these cases, you need to go to HR and report what you have observed. 
	Be ready to share evidence. 
	Take care of yourself
	Working for an incompetent boss can be bad for your health. "There is a lot of research on the negative psychological effects," 
	says McKee. She suggests creating psychological boundaries that protect you from the emotional damage. We have a tendency to point 
	to a bad boss and say, "He is ruining my life." But, this ignores the fact that you have agency in the situation: you can decide 
	whether to stay or not. "Once you become a victim, you cease to become a leader," she says. Focus on what makes you happy about 
	your job, not miserable. "We can come to work every day and pay attention to this horrible boss or we can choose to pay attention 
	to the people we are happy to see every day or the work we enjoy. We can choose which emotions we lean into," says McKee.
	Of course, if you aren't able to do that, you shouldn't suffer indefinitely. Consider looking for a transfer to a new boss or 
	a new employer.
	Principles to Remember
	Do
	
		- Have empathy for your boss and the pressures he may be under.
 
		- Create psychological boundaries around work so that your boss's incompetence doesn't negatively impact your health or wellbeing.
 
		- Focus on the broader good of the organization and what you can do to contribute.
 
	
	
	Don't
	
		- Try to point out to your boss all the ways that she is incompetent.
 
		- Go to your boss's boss unless you are aware of the potential ramifications.
 
		- Stick it out if none of your coping strategies are working - know when you need to leave.
 
	
"There was a constant disrespecting and belittling of staff and we both felt there was a lack of knowledge from ownership and upper 
management in running a newsroom to the extent that I was not allowed to structure and direct them professionally,". I guess those two 
never worked in IT departments this this is a standard established practice;-)
	
	Anyone who has been fed up with salary, management or other issues that have made a job unbearable has surely dreamed of a "take-this-job-and-shove-it" 
	moment. For most, though, news of the moment likely wouldn't make it outside the workplace walls. 
	That wasn't the case for a TV news anchor duo in Bangor, Maine, who quit their jobs in front of thousands of viewers at the end 
	of Tuesday evening's newscast. 
	Follow @NBCNewsUSIn what was reportedly inspired by a conflict with upper management, co-anchors Cindy Michaels and Tony Consiglio 
	announced to viewers that it would be their last show, the Bangor Daily News reported. 
	The news anchors shared more than 12 years of experience working for WVII and sister station WFVX, according to the Daily News.
	
	
		"Some recent developments have come to our attention ... and departing together is the best alternative we can take," Consiglio 
		told viewers. 
		"We wanted to be able to say a thoughtful, heartfelt good-bye to our viewers and to the many communities we served over the 
		years," Michaels told NBC News in an email Wednesday. "We scripted something to keep from getting off-course and emotional."
		
	
	Michaels, 46, and Consiglio, 28, didn't tell anyone of their decision before the newscast, according to the Bangor Daily News.
	The newspaper reported the journalists were frustrated over the last four years with the way they were 
	told to do their jobs. In her signoff, Michaels claimed the two were "the longest running news team in Bangor," with 
	six years at the desk. 
	
		"There was a constant disrespecting and belittling of staff and we both felt there was a lack 
		of knowledge from ownership and upper management in running a newsroom to the extent that I was not allowed to structure and 
		direct them professionally," 
	
	Michaels, who also served as the station's news director, told the Bangor Daily News. Her co-anchor, Consiglio, also served as 
	executive producer for the station. 
	"There was a regular undoing of decisions made by me, the news director," Michaels told NBC News, citing that politically-charged 
	stories were sometimes not treated with an unbiased approach. 
	Michaels' public LinkedIn profile indicates she has worked at the station since October 2006. Consiglio, who was first a sports 
	anchor and reporter before moving over to the news anchor role, has worked at the station since April 2006, according to his public 
	LinkedIn profile. 
	Mike Palmer, the station's vice president and general manager, told the Bangor Daily News the incident was "unfortunate, but 
	not unexpected." Palmer denied claims that upper management was involved in daily news production. 
	But a 2006 New York Times' story indicates that may not be true. Following a broadcast segment about the showing of Al Gore's 
	"An Inconvenient Truth," Palmer wrote to his staff that they should refrain from reporting on global warming until Bar Harbor is 
	underwater. 
	He explained: "a) we do local news, b) the issue evolved from hard science into hard politics and c) despite what you may have 
	heard from the mainstream media, this science is far from conclusive." 
	According to the Times' report, Palmer likened global to "global warming stories in the same category as 'the killer African 
	bee scare' from the 1970s or, more recently, the Y2K scare when everyone's computer was going to self-destruct." 
	As of Wednesday morning, WVII's employment page listed no open job opportunities, but the Bangor Daily News reported Palmer posted 
	online job opening ads Tuesday night. 
	The anchors are moving on: Michaels told viewers she will pursue freelance writing, while Consiglio said he'll continue his career 
	"in another capacity." 
	See the video of the co-anchors final sign-off on the Bangor Daily News website. 
	fahrbot-bot
	
		Just another tool in the box...August 26, 2012
		I've spent 1/2 my 25+ year career as a "Unix" (you know what I mean) system administrator and the other 1/2 as a Unix system 
		programmer, sometimes application programmer, all with a little (sigh) DOS/Windows thrown in. I've worked on just about every 
		flavor of Unix running on PC class to Cray-2 hardware, usually several at any one time. For most of that time, there were no 
		books on the topics, just man pages and the compiler. Linux is just another tool in my toolbox. 
		It seems almost universal that every prospective employer only sees the "other" half of my experience - We want a sysadmin, 
		but you're a programmer. We want a programmer, but you're a sysadmin. I simply tell them I do both and I do both well. Resume 
		and references speak for themselves. 
		I got my first jobs at my university doing LISP research and working in the CS office. First real job because employer liked 
		my school experience (did more than just took classes). It was small company and I did both system programming/admin (on 8 different 
		versions of Unix). Second job, I bumped into professor from school and got job as both Unix system admin/programmer at NASA 
		Langley (super computing network) and another contractor as sysadmin (100+ Sun/SGI workstations); then The New York Times for 
		a few years as Unix sysadmin; now defense contractor (can't say who) for 11 years, because of friend from very first job. Now 
		I work on primarily Solaris, Linux and (sigh, still) Windows systems as a system/application programmer - in about 10 different 
		programming languages - and sysadmin when needed. 
		All in all, you learn what you need to know and what interests you - sometimes the weirder the better. You never know where 
		it will lead.
		There is one definitive: I hate Windows, especially Windows 7 - or as I call it "Windows for Dummies".
	
	CAIMLAS (41445) writes:
	
		it's a bag of tricks (Score:2)
		
			'Linux professional,' I mean anyone in a paid IT position who uses or administers Linux systems on a daily basis.
		Being a "Linux Professional" (or as people tend to more often call me, "Linux Guru", damn them) is more about a broad and 
		deep level of experience than it is about 'knowing linux'. For instance, you're going to know the inner workings of how many 
		protocols work; you're going to know how to build your own Linux distro (more or less), and you're going to know how hardware 
		behaves properly. There are many 'professionals' who don't know this, but if you're specializing you've got to know pretty much 
		everything.
		Think: RHCE or similar.
		
			Over the past five years, I've developed an affection for Linux, and use it every day as a freelance IT consultant. I've 
			built a breadth of somewhat intermediate skills, using several distros for everything from everyday desktop use, to building 
			servers from scratch, to performing data recovery. I'm interested in taking my skills to the next level - and making a career 
			out of it - but I'm not sure how best to appeal to prospective employers, or even what to specialize in
		
		You'll become a generalist unless you become a "Postfix Administrator" or something like that. That's the most likely first 
		step. You will pick up your specialty over the years, largely depending on which type of systems you're working on.
		
			(I refuse to believe the only option is 'sysadmin,' though I'm certainly not opposed to that). 
		
		That's not the only option, but it's the main and first one you'll have to master. Being an architect or systems specialist 
		(mail, dns, filesystems, whatever) is the next step up. It takes a while to get there, and usually requires either a specialized 
		company dealing exclusively with something in that domain, a very large corporation, or contracting.
		
			Specifically, I'm interested in what practical steps I can take to build meaningful skills that an employer can verify, 
			and will find valuable.
		This is sorta "LOL". You assume that your employer cares more than anything other than a stable work history and/or specifically 
		applicable experience to what you will be doing on a day in and out basis. It is a rare IT manager who cares more about this, 
		even. Being highly skilled and capable, in a field where your skillset is in demand, is entirely 
		different than being employable doing said work.
		
			So, what do you do, and how did you get there? How did you conquer the catch-22 of needing experience to get the position 
			that gives you the experience to get the position?
		You know the right people, or you luck out and get a job in the field right after school. Part of lucking out is knowing 
		the right people.
		Every single IT job I've gotten has either been due to the employer being desperate because they 
		have someone vacating a crucial position or expansive growth they can't manage, or through a friend. I've also
		not gotten jobs through friends, after failing interviews (not enough experience in such-and-such technology or the snap-judgement 
		IT Director not liking me, or any number of other things.)
		
			Did you get certified, devour books and manpages, apprentice under an expert, some combination of the above, or something 
			else entirely?"
		Everyone is different in this regard. I personally got a 4 year degree and spent many, many long hours devouring man pages, 
		chatting on technical IRC, experimenting/pushing my envelope, and reading in general. That's the easy part. The hardest part 
		of all of it is breaking into a linux-oriented job, IMO. If you're not in the right market, you've got to get yourself to that 
		market before any of your experience even matters. Knowing the right people is, IMO, key. Personally, it took approximately 
		5 years of constant trying, experimentation with what works, etc. to get my first 'linux' job - and that was primarily a FreeBSD 
		job, at that. Now I'm working primarily with AIX (just several years later). There is no golden bullet, here, and you will probably 
		find it almost impossible to find your 'ideal' job. (Mine would be doing systems engineering/administration/management in an 
		academic/scientific setting. I've done it for a year so far, and would love to get back to doing it again.)  
	
	
	"My manager is clueless." These are words you don't want to hear 
	if you want to earn the respect of your application development professionals. So how do you avoid being a clueless manager? Steer 
	clear of these behaviors:
	1. The manager is a control nut.  If you want to be a
	Controller then get a job in the accounting 
	department. Okay, so maybe you are not a certifiable control nut. Maybe it is just a strategy you are employing because your direct 
	reports can't get the job done. If this is the case, then control is not the solution. Have the courage to replace those managers 
	that aren't strong. Control won't work in the long run anyway. 
	2. The manager is aloof.  Stop thinking about your golf 
	game. You may have a great team-strong individual managers and 
	team chemistry-but your leadership is still necessary to keep things on course (not the golf course). Besides, no matter how much 
	you practice, your golf game will still be mediocre, but you can be at 
	the top of your game as manager if you work at it. 
	3. The manager gulps vendor Kool-Aid. Did you know that there are more than
	34,750 registered 
	lobbyists in Washington, D.C., for just 435 representatives and 100 senators? That's 64 lobbyists for each congressperson. I 
	wonder how many vendor account managers there are per manager. You are smart enough to know that
	vendors are trying to sell you and 
	you won't be fooled wholesale. Yeah right. Their influence can eat away at you without you even realizing it. Be even more skeptical 
	than you are now. Just say no. 
	4. The manager is a technical dinosaur. Unless you are running for president of the United States, experience does matter. 
	Technology has changed since you were writing RPG on the mainframe 
	umpteen years ago. And for you younger guys who made your bones writing VB or Java Web apps, make sure you know why there is so 
	much buzz about Ruby on Rails and
	multicore programming. 
	Your ability to talk tech will go a long way to earning the respect of application development professionals. 
	5. The manager thinks changes can happen overnight. Sorry to have to break this to you: You are not a wizard and your 
	magic wand doesn't work. 
	6. The manager doesn't know the difference between resources and talent. The fastest way to lose respect is to put clueless 
	managers in charge. Clueless managers equal clueless managers. Can you ever imagine
	Doc Rivers, coach of the 2008 world champion
	Boston Celtics, 
	talking about player resources like they were interchangeable? "I need two guard resources." "I need a center resource." No. Talent 
	and teamwork make winning teams.
	Talent matters. Don't pay lip-service 
	to talent. Find a way to locate and use the talent in your organization. You will only be as good as the team you assemble. 
	7. The manager collaborates to death. Whether it is the character flaw of being indecisive or some middle-school notion 
	of democracy, you are in charge. Collaboration is critical, but you also need to make the right decision at the right time. Collaborate 
	like Captain Kirk. 
	"Spock?" "Bones?" He gets opinions from his experts but there is never any question about who will make the final decision. And, 
	if you never watched Star Trek then you shouldn't 
	even be a manager. 
	
	
by 
	roster238 (969495) on Tuesday July 01, @08:33PM (#24024329)
			
	The reason why managers are normally clueless is that you have to be competent to recognize incompetence.
	The folks who normally select senior IT managers are business people who have no understanding 
			of technology whatsoever. The are in fact "technically" incompetent. They choose the person who scares them 
			least.
			
	They want the person with whom that can communicate without being bogged down with any complexities or difficult concepts. 
			They will stay far away from the most knowledgeable and experienced people in favor of someone who laughs and jokes with 
			them about the big game, a television show, or anything else they can understand. They will reject someone with the capability 
			to understand a system from the ground up as not seeing the "big picture". This is why senior IT managers are often unsure 
			that they are getting the bang for the buck that an IT department should bring to the table. It's because they pick the 
			least qualified person to lead based on their personality rather than ability.
	On the positive side the senior IT manager who wants to keep his job will find a few key people who really know what 
			they doing and throw money at them to ensure that they don't leave. They are the folks who really run the department by 
			proxy.
	 
	2005
	The obscenity that's corporate jargon is my pet hate. So imagine the response to Hewlett-Packard chief Mark Hurd's spin on the 
	company's decision to lay off 14,500 workers, or one in 10 of its employees. ''The majority of the head-count reductions will be 
	achieved trough involuntary actions," he said in a
	
	New York Times report. It was bad enough that sacking someone morphed into ''downsizing'' and ''rightsizing''. Now they're calling 
	it ''involuntary action''. 
	With his terrific
	
	anti-jargon book now hitting the American market, Paul Keating's former speech writer Don Watson has a
	web site asking people to send in weasel words.
	
	
	What happened to the old "sysadmin" of just a few years ago? We've split what used to be the sysadmin into application 
	teams, server teams, storage teams, and network teams. There were often at least a few people, the holders 
	of knowledge, who knew how everything worked, and I mean everything. Every application, every piece of network gear, 
	and how every server was configured -- these people could save a business in times of disaster. 
	Now look at what we've done. Knowledge is so decentralized we must invent new roles to act as liaisons 
	between all the IT groups. Architects now hold much of the high-level "how it works" knowledge, but without knowing 
	how any one piece actually does work. In organizations with more than a few hundred IT staff and developers, it becomes nearly impossible 
	for one person to do and know everything. This movement toward specializing in individual areas seems almost natural. That, however, 
	does not provide a free ticket for people to turn a blind eye.
	Specialization
	You know the story: Company installs new application, nobody understands it yet, so an expert is hired. Often, the person with 
	a certification in using the new application only really knows how to run that application. Perhaps they aren't interested in learning 
	anything else, because their skill is in high demand right now. And besides, everything else in the infrastructure is run by people 
	who specialize in those elements. Everything is taken care of.
	Except, how do these teams communicate when changes need to take place? Are the storage administrators teaching the 
	Windows administrators about storage multipathing; or worse logging in and setting it up because it's faster for the storage gurus 
	to do it themselves? A fundamental level of knowledge is often lacking, which makes it very difficult for teams to brainstorm about 
	new ways evolve IT services. The business environment has made it OK for IT staffers to specialize and only learn one thing.
	If you hire someone certified in the application, operating system, or network vendor you use, that is precisely what you get. 
	Certifications may be a nice filter to quickly identify who has direct knowledge in the area you're hiring for, but often they indicate 
	specialization or compensation for lack of experience.
	Resource Competition
	Does your IT department function as a unit? Even 20-person IT shops have turf wars, 
	so the answer is very likely, "no." As teams are split into more and more distinct operating units, grouping occurs. One IT budget 
	gets split between all these groups. Often each group will have a manager who pitches his needs to upper management in hopes they 
	will realize how important the team is. 
	The "us vs. them" mentality manifests itself at all levels, and it's reinforced by management 
	having to define each team's worth in the form of a budget. One strategy is to illustrate a doomsday scenario. If 
	you paint a bleak enough picture, you may get more funding. Only if you are careful enough to illustrate the failings are due to 
	lack of capital resources, not management or people. A manager of another group may explain that they are not receiving the correct 
	level of service, so they need to duplicate the efforts of another group and just implement something themselves. On and on, the 
	arguments continue. 
	Most often, I've seen competition between server groups result in horribly inefficient uses of hardware. For example, 
	what happens in your organization when one team needs more server hardware? Assume that another team has five unused servers sitting 
	in a blade chassis. Does the answer change? No, it does not. Even in test environments, sharing doesn't often happen between IT 
	groups. 
	With virtualization, some aspects of resource competition get better and some remain the same. When first implemented, most groups 
	will be running their own type of virtualization for their platform. The next step, I've most often seen, is for test servers to 
	get virtualized. If a new group is formed to manage the virtualization infrastructure, virtual machines can be allocated to various 
	application and server teams from a central pool and everyone is now sharing. Or, they begin sharing and then demand their own physical 
	hardware to be isolated from others' resource hungry utilization. This is nonetheless a step in the right direction. Auto migration 
	and guaranteed resource policies can go a long way toward making shared infrastructure, even between competing groups, a viable 
	option.
	Blamestorming
	The most damaging side effect of splitting into too many distinct IT groups is the reinforcement of an "us versus 
	them" mentality. Aside from the notion that specialization creates a lack of knowledge, blamestorming is what this article is really 
	about. When a project is delayed, it is all too easy to blame another group. The SAN 
	people didn't allocate storage on time, so another team was delayed. That is the timeline of the project, so all work halted until 
	that hiccup was restored. Having someone else to blame when things get delayed makes it all too easy to simply stop working for 
	a while.
	More related to the initial points at the beginning of this article, perhaps, is the blamestorm that happens after a system outage.
	
	Say an ERP system becomes unresponsive a few times throughout the day. The application team says it's just slowing 
	down, and they don't know why. The network team says everything is fine. The server team says the application is "blocking on IO," 
	which means it's a SAN issue. The SAN team say there is nothing wrong, and other applications on the same devices are fine. You've 
	ran through nearly every team, but without an answer still. The SAN people don't have access to the application servers to help 
	diagnose the problem. The server team doesn't even know how the application runs. 
	See the problem? Specialized teams are distinct and by nature adversarial. Specialized 
	staffers often relegate themselves into a niche knowing that as long as they continue working at large enough companies, "someone 
	else" will take care of all the other pieces. 
	I unfortunately don't have an answer to this problem. Maybe rotating employees between departments will help. They 
	gain knowledge and also get to know other people, which should lessen the propensity to view them as outsiders
Even if you are in a technical position, you may still find yourself dealing with sales people and other corporate types. You may 
also discover that they speak a different language and use an arsenal of corny phrases that might just give you the hives. This article 
is a glossary of our 35 favorite terms and phrases. 
	- Acquisition Demonstration of the corporate food chain, whereby larger eats smaller and then excretes all non-essential 
	nutrients. 
 
	- Action Item Something which needs to be either done or at least placed in a list of things in need of doing. This is 
	probably the most annoying corporate term that there is. 
 
	- Challenge A big problem that nobody in the company knows how to fix. A challenge may very well lead to the demise of 
	said company. If your company spends more time talking about challenges than home runs, it may be time to look for a new job.
	
 
	- Corporate The group of people in a company that make the important decisions and all of the money. You are most likely 
	not a member of this group. 
 
	- Corporate Vision The list of things that a company would like to provide and accomplish. Hallucinations of the top brass. 
	. 
 
	- Deliverables Features of a product that should have been included in the original release, 
	however, due to market pressure the product had to be released without these features. These may be sent to customers if/when they 
	are available. 
 
	- Disconnect This is a misunderstanding. For example, your sales staff is probably selling a product that was discontinued 
	in the '70s. This would be a disconnect between sales and marketing. 
 
	- Diversity awareness/training The classes that are taken when a racial discrimination or sexual harassment complaint has 
	been filed against a company in order to limit legal liability. 
 
	- Download If you request information from me, I will give you the download. This term 
	is usually used by sales staff in hi-tech companies that want to seem cool in front of the computer 
	geeks. 
 
	- Fast Track Usually referring to a person that has moved up the corporate ladder faster than they could prove their worth 
	or be held accountable for the mess they made. 
 
	- Growth industry A bandwagon. All aboard? 
 
	- Hit a Home Run This can either mean that things went according to planned for once or that the sales team has actually 
	been coming into work and selling stuff. 
 
	- Incentive This means to motivate someone to do something by promising something (usually a company mug or pen) if they 
	do. They become a perfectly predictable robot, subject to the whims and offerings of the clever, incentive-offering manager.
	
 
	- Integrated solution A utopian term meaning that all of the different parts of a solution (product or series of
	products) work together. While the term is used frequently, there is no such thing in the real world.
	
 
	- Key Enabler The person that will get all of the credit on a project. 
 
	- Leverage A fancy version of the word "use." For example, instead of saying "We could use your product knowledge to help 
	us make a sale", the corporate type would say, "We could leverage your product knowledge to help us make a sale". The use of this 
	word is one of many examples of people trying to sound important in the office. 
 
	- Major Account As a technical type, these are the accounts that you will drop everything for and brown-nose at the request 
	of sales and management. 
 
	- Metric A measurement of success or value. These measurable parameters are used by companies to make important decisions 
	regardless as to whether or not they are measuring what they should be or their collection model is sound. 
 
	- Next steps Next steps are where you go from here and can refer to a project or a process. It is difficult to ever complete 
	these steps due to the number of meetings scheduled to determine what the next steps are. 
 
	- Objections The reasons why a customer does not want to buy from your sales people. The most common objection is the overuse 
	of the terms on this page which tends to confuse the customer. The antidote is plain English. 
 
	- Off-line This means to discuss something in a place or at a time other than the one you currently find yourself in. This 
	may be used by managers to convey that they do not wish to talk about the subject, they do not find it important or you are wasting 
	everyone else's time in a meeting. 
 
	- Out of the Loop This phrase means that one has not been informed about a subject. It is used to deny responsibility or 
	to complain about not having been consulted. 
 
	- Outside the Box Creativity. Those that do think outside the box are generally considered rabble-rousers and trouble-makers. 
	While verbally encouraged, your reward for thinking outside the box may be a pink slip party. 
 
	- Outsourcing The process of laying off internal employees in favor of a staff of high-school drop-outs run by another 
	company for half the price. 
 
	- Overhead The cost of keeping the lights on and the doors open. 
 
	- Own To take responsibility for something. Someone who "owns" something can never claim that they are "out of the loop."
	
 
	- Pre-Meeting A meeting before another meeting in which the company slackers will get together and figure out what to say 
	or present at the next meeting so that they do not make fools of themselves. 
 
	- Resource An employee. Resources are managed by a group which calls itself "Human Resources." Like
	hardware, resources have fixed lifespans, can become obsolete and can even malfunction. 
 
	- Restructuring Poor choices have been made and the company needs to start from scratch. Will include massive layoffs and 
	double the workload for those that remain. Upper management will all receive raises. 
 
	- Talk Track A sales pitch committed to memory by sales staff. Designed to prevent foot-in-mouth 
	syndrome and to discourage creativity. 
 
	- Team This term refers to a group of people that work together. The team is strongest when composed of "Yes" men and women.
	
 
	- Up-Selling The process of convincing a customer to purchase products and services that they do not want or need. 
 
	- Value-added Tacking on extra features (for free) to an existing product so that customers have difficulty comparing prices 
	with competitors. 
 
	- War Story A story told by a salesperson that describes a difficult sale that they made. It usually starts off something 
	like, "So I was in the Bahamas..." 
 
	- win/win A fascinating business concept that somehow eliminates the "loser" in any deal 
	or project. A win/win situation is when a customer pays their bills on time and doesn't ever complain. 
 
	In a knowledge economy, companies with the best talent win. And finding, nurturing, and developing that talent should be one 
	of the most important tasks in a corporation. So why does human resources do such a bad job -- and how can we fix it?
	From: Issue 97 | August 2005
	| Page 40 | By: Keith H. Hammonds | Illustrations by: Gary Baseman 
	Because let's face it: After close to 20 years of hopeful rhetoric about becoming "strategic partners" with a "seat at the table" 
	where the business decisions that matter are made, most human-resources professionals aren't nearly there. They have no seat, and 
	the table is locked inside a conference room to which they have no key. HR people are, for most practical 
	purposes, neither strategic nor leaders. 
	I don't care for Las Vegas. And if it's not clear already, I don't like HR, either, which is why I'm here. The human-resources 
	trade long ago proved itself, at best, a necessary evil -- and at worst, a dark bureaucratic force that blindly enforces nonsensical 
	rules, resists creativity, and impedes constructive change. HR is the corporate function with the greatest potential -- 
	the key driver, in theory, of business performance -- and also the one that most consistently underdelivers. And I am here to find 
	out why. 
	Why are annual performance appraisals so time-consuming -- and so routinely useless? Why is HR so often a henchman for the chief 
	financial officer, finding ever-more ingenious ways to cut benefits and hack at payroll? Why do its communications -- when we can 
	understand them at all -- so often flout reality? Why are so many people processes duplicative and wasteful, creating a forest of 
	paperwork for every minor transaction? And why does HR insist on sameness as a proxy for equity? 
	It's no wonder that we hate HR. In a 2005 survey by consultancy Hay Group, just 40% of employees commended their companies for 
	retaining high-quality workers. Just 41% agreed that performance evaluations were fair. Only 58% rated their job training as favorable. 
	Most said they had few opportunities for advancement -- and that they didn't know, in any case, what was required to move up. Most 
	telling, only about half of workers below the manager level believed their companies took a genuine interest in their well-being.
	
	None of this is explained immediately in Vegas. These HR folks, from employers across the nation, are neither evil courtiers 
	nor thoughtless automatons. They are mostly smart, engaging people who seem genuinely interested in doing their jobs better. They 
	speak convincingly about employee development and cultural transformation. And, over drinks, they spin some pretty funny yarns of 
	employee weirdness. (Like the one about the guy who threatened to sue his wife's company for "enabling" her affair with a coworker. 
	Then there was the mentally disabled worker and the hooker -- well, no, never mind. . . .) 
	But then the facade cracks. It happens at an afternoon presentation called "From Technicians to Consultants: How to Transform 
	Your HR Staff into Strategic Business Partners." The speaker, Julie Muckler, is senior vice president of human resources at Wells 
	Fargo Home Mortgage. She is an enthusiastic woman with a broad smile and 20 years of experience at companies such as Johnson & Johnson 
	and General Tire. She has degrees in consumer economics and human resources and organizational development. 
	And I have no idea what she's talking about. There is mention of "internal action learning" and "being more planful in my approach." 
	PowerPoint slides outline Wells Fargo Home Mortgage's initiatives in performance management, organization design, and horizontal-solutions 
	teams. Muckler describes leveraging internal resources and involving external resources -- and she leaves her audience dazed. That 
	evening, even the human-resources pros confide they didn't understand much of it, either. 
	This, friends, is the trouble with HR. In a knowledge economy, companies that have the best talent win. We all know that. Human 
	resources execs should be making the most of our, well, human resources -- finding the best hires, nurturing the stars, fostering 
	a productive work environment -- just as IT runs the computers and finance minds the capital. HR should be joined to business strategy 
	at the hip. 
	Instead, most HR organizations have ghettoized themselves literally to the brink of obsolescence. 
	They are competent at the administrivia of pay, benefits, and retirement, but companies increasingly are farming those functions 
	out to contractors who can handle such routine tasks at lower expense. What's left is the more important strategic 
	role of raising the reputational and intellectual capital of the company -- but HR is, it turns out, uniquely unsuited for that.
	
	Here's why. 
	1. HR people aren't the sharpest tacks in the box. We'll be blunt: If you are an ambitious young thing newly 
	graduated from a top college or B-school with your eye on a rewarding career in business, your first instinct is not to join the 
	human-resources dance. (At the University of Michigan's Ross School of Business, which arguably boasts the nation's top faculty 
	for organizational issues, just 1.2% of 2004 grads did so.) Says a management professor at one leading school: "The best and the 
	brightest don't go into HR." 
	Who does? Intelligent people, sometimes -- but not businesspeople. "HR doesn't tend to hire a lot of independent thinkers or 
	people who stand up as moral compasses," says Garold L. Markle, a longtime human-resources executive at Exxon and Shell Offshore 
	who now runs his own consultancy. Some are exiles from the corporate mainstream: They've fared poorly in meatier roles -- but not 
	poorly enough to be fired. For them, and for their employers, HR represents a relatively low-risk parking spot. 
	Others enter the field by choice and with the best of intentions, but for the wrong reasons. They like working with people, and 
	they want to be helpful -- noble motives that thoroughly tick off some HR thinkers. "When people have come to me and said, 'I want 
	to work with people,' I say, 'Good, go be a social worker,' " says Arnold Kanarick, who has headed human resources at the Limited 
	and, until recently, at Bear Stearns. "HR isn't about being a do-gooder. It's about how do you get the best and brightest people 
	and raise the value of the firm." 
	The really scary news is that the gulf between capabilities and job requirements appears to be widening. As business and legal 
	demands on the function intensify, staffers' educational qualifications haven't kept pace. In fact, according to a survey by the 
	Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM), a considerably smaller proportion of HR professionals today have some education beyond 
	a bachelor's degree than in 1990. 
	And here's one more slice of telling SHRM data: When HR professionals were asked about the worth of various academic courses 
	toward a "successful career in HR," 83% said that classes in interpersonal communications skills had "extremely high value." Employment 
	law and business ethics followed, at 71% and 66%, respectively. Where was change management? At 35%. Strategic management? 32%. 
	Finance? Um, that was just 2%. 
	The truth? Most human-resources managers aren't particularly interested in, or equipped for, doing business. And in a business, 
	that's sort of a problem. As guardians of a company's talent, HR has to understand how people serve corporate objectives. Instead, 
	"business acumen is the single biggest factor that HR professionals in the U.S. lack today," says Anthony J. Rucci, executive vice 
	president at Cardinal Health Inc., a big health-care supply distributor. 
	Rucci is consistently mentioned by academics, consultants, and other HR leaders as an executive who actually does know business. 
	At Baxter International, he ran both HR and corporate strategy. Before that, at Sears, he led a study of results at 800 stores over 
	five years to assess the connection between employee commitment, customer loyalty, and profitability. 
	As far as Rucci is concerned, there are three questions that any decent HR person in the world should be able to answer. First, 
	who is your company's core customer? "Have you talked to one lately? Do you know what challenges they face?" Second, who is the 
	competition? "What do they do well and not well?" And most important, who are we? "What is a realistic assessment of what we do 
	well and not so well vis a vis the customer and the competition?" 
	Does your HR pro know the answers? 
	2. HR pursues efficiency in lieu of value. Why? Because it's easier -- and easier to measure. Dave Ulrich, 
	a professor at the University of Michigan, recalls meeting with the chairman and top HR people from a big bank. "The training person 
	said that 80% of employees have done at least 40 hours in classes. The chairman said, 'Congratulations.' I said, 'You're talking 
	about the activities you're doing. The question is, What are you delivering?' " 
	That sort of stuff drives Ulrich nuts. Over 20 years, he has become the HR trade's best-known guru (see "The Once and Future 
	Consultant," page 48) and a leading proponent of the push to take on more-strategic roles within corporations. But human-resources 
	managers, he acknowledges, typically undermine that effort by investing more importance in activities than in outcomes. "You're 
	only effective if you add value," Ulrich says. "That means you're not measured by what you do but by what you deliver." By that, 
	he refers not just to the value delivered to employees and line managers, but the benefits that accrue to investors and customers, 
	as well. 
	So here's a true story: A talented young marketing exec accepts a job offer with Time Warner out of business school. She interviews 
	for openings in several departments -- then is told by HR that only one is interested in her. In fact, she learns later, they all 
	had been. She had been railroaded into the job, under the supervision of a widely reviled manager, because no one inside the company 
	would take it. 
	You make the call: Did HR do its job? On the one hand, it filled the empty slot. "It did what was organizationally expedient," 
	says the woman now. "Getting someone who wouldn't kick and scream about this role probably made sense to them. But I just felt angry." 
	She left Time Warner after just a year. (A Time Warner spokesperson declined to comment on the incident.) 
	Part of the problem is that Time Warner's metrics likely will never catch the real cost of its HR department's action. Human 
	resources can readily provide the number of people it hired, the percentage of performance evaluations completed, and the extent 
	to which employees are satisfied or not with their benefits. But only rarely does it link any of those metrics to business performance.
	
	John W. Boudreau, a professor at the University of Southern California's Center for Effective Organizations, likens the failing 
	to shortcomings of the finance function before DuPont figured out how to calculate return on investment in 1912. In HR, he says, 
	"we don't have anywhere near that kind of logical sophistication in the way of people or talent. So the decisions that get made 
	about that resource are far less sophisticated, reliable, and consistent." 
	Cardinal Health's Rucci is trying to fix that. Cardinal regularly asks its employees 12 questions designed to measure engagement. 
	Among them: Do they understand the company's strategy? Do they see the connection between that and their jobs? Are they proud to 
	tell people where they work? Rucci correlates the results to those of a survey of 2,000 customers, as well as monthly sales data 
	and brand-awareness scores. 
	"So I don't know if our HR processes are having an impact" per se, Rucci says. "But I know absolutely that employee-engagement 
	scores have an impact on our business," accounting for between 1% and 10% of earnings, depending on the business and the employee's 
	role. "Cardinal may not anytime soon get invited by the Conference Board to explain our world-class best practices in any area of 
	HR -- and I couldn't care less. The real question is, Is the business effective and successful?" 
	3. HR isn't working for you. Want to know why you go through that asinine performance appraisal every year, 
	really? Markle, who admits to having administered countless numbers of them over the years, is pleased to confirm your suspicions. 
	Companies, he says "are doing it to protect themselves against their own employees," he says. "They put a piece of paper between 
	you and employees, so if you ever have a confrontation, you can go to the file and say, 'Here, I've documented this problem.' "
	
	There's a good reason for this defensive stance, of course. In the last two generations, government has created an immense thicket 
	of labor regulations. Equal Employment Opportunity; Fair Labor Standards; Occupational Safety and Health; Family and Medical Leave; 
	and the ever-popular ERISA. These are complex, serious issues requiring technical expertise, and HR has to apply reasonable caution.
	
	But "it's easy to get sucked down into that," says Mark Royal, a senior consultant with Hay Group. "There's a tension created 
	by HR's role as protector of corporate assets -- making sure it doesn't run afoul of the rules. That puts you in the position of 
	saying no a lot, of playing the bad cop. You have to step out of that, see the broad possibilities, and take a more open-minded 
	approach. You need to understand where the exceptions to broad policies can be made." 
	Typically, HR people can't, or won't. Instead, they pursue standardization and uniformity in the face of a workforce that is 
	heterogeneous and complex. A manager at a large capital leasing company complains that corporate HR is trying to eliminate most 
	vice-president titles there -- even though veeps are a dime a dozen in the finance industry. Why? Because in the company's commercial 
	business, vice president is a rank reserved for the top officers. In its drive for bureaucratic "fairness," HR is actually threatening 
	the reputation, and so the effectiveness, of the company's finance professionals. 
	The urge for one-size-fits-all, says one professor who studies the field, "is partly about compliance, but mostly because it's 
	just easier." Bureaucrats everywhere abhor exceptions -- not just because they open up the company to charges of bias but because 
	they require more than rote solutions. They're time-consuming and expensive to manage. Make one exception, HR fears, and the floodgates 
	will open. 
	There's a contradiction here, of course: Making exceptions should be exactly what human resources does, all the time -- not because 
	it's nice for employees, but because it drives the business. Employers keep their best people by acknowledging and rewarding their 
	distinctive performance, not by treating them the same as everyone else. "If I'm running a business, I can tell you who's really 
	helping to drive the business forward," says Dennis Ackley, an employee communication consultant. "HR should have the same view. 
	We should send the message that we value our high-performing employees and we're focused on rewarding and retaining them." 
	Instead, human-resources departments benchmark salaries, function by function and job by job, against industry standards, keeping 
	pay -- even that of the stars -- within a narrow band determined by competitors. They bounce performance appraisals back to managers 
	who rate their employees too highly, unwilling to acknowledge accomplishments that would merit much more than the 4% companywide 
	increase. 
	Human resources, in other words, forfeits long-term value for short-term cost efficiency. A simple test: Who does your company's 
	vice president of human resources report to? If it's the CFO -- and chances are good it is -- then HR is headed in the wrong direction. 
	"That's a model that cannot work," says one top HR exec who has been there. "A financial person is concerned with taking money out 
	of the organization. HR should be concerned with putting investments in." 
	4. The corner office doesn't get HR (and vice versa). I'm at another rockin' party: a few dozen midlevel human-resources 
	managers at a hotel restaurant in Mahwah, New Jersey. It is not glam in any way. (I've got to get a better travel agent.) But it 
	is telling, in a hopeful way. Hunter Douglas, a $2.1 billion manufacturer of window coverings, has brought its HR staff here from 
	across the United States to celebrate their accomplishments. 
	The company's top brass is on hand. Marvin B. Hopkins, president and CEO of North American operations, lays on the praise: "I 
	feel fantastic about your achievements," he says. "Our business is about people. Hiring, training, and empathizing with employees 
	is extremely important. When someone is fired or leaves, we've failed in some way. People have to feel they have a place at the 
	company, a sense of ownership." 
	So, yeah, it's corporate-speak in a drab exurban office park. But you know what? The human-resources managers from Tupelo and 
	Dallas are totally pumped up. They've been flown into headquarters, they've had their picture taken with the boss, and they're seeing
	Mamma Mia on Broadway that afternoon on the company's dime. 
	Can your HR department say it has the ear of top management? Probably not. "Sometimes," says Ulrich, "line managers just have 
	this legacy of HR in their minds, and they can't get rid of it. I felt really badly for one HR guy. The chairman wanted someone 
	to plan company picnics and manage the union, and every time this guy tried to be strategic, he got shot down." 
	Say what? Execs don't think HR matters? What about all that happy talk about employees being their most important asset? Well, 
	that turns out to have been a small misunderstanding. In the 1990s, a group of British academics examined the relationship between 
	what companies (among them, the UK units of Hewlett-Packard and Citibank) said about their human assets and how they actually behaved. 
	The results were, perhaps, inevitable. 
	In their rhetoric, human-resources organizations embraced the language of a "soft" approach, speaking of training, development, 
	and commitment. But "the underlying principle was invariably restricted to the improvements of bottom-line performance," the authors 
	wrote in the resulting book, Strategic Human Resource Management (Oxford University Press, 1999). 
	"Even if the rhetoric of HRM is soft, the reality is almost always 'hard,' with the interests of the organization prevailing 
	over those of the individual." 
	In the best of worlds, says London Business School professor Lynda Gratton, one of the study's authors, "the reality should be 
	some combination of hard and soft." That's what's going on at Hunter Douglas. Human resources can address the needs of employees 
	because it has proven its business mettle -- and vice versa. Betty Lou Smith, the company's vice president of corporate HR, began 
	investigating the connection between employee turnover and product quality. Divisions with the highest turnover rates, she found, 
	were also those with damaged-goods rates of 5% or higher. And extraordinarily, 70% of employees were leaving the company within 
	six months of being hired. 
	Smith's staffers learned that new employees were leaving for a variety of reasons: They didn't feel respected, they didn't have 
	input in decisions, but mostly, they felt a lack of connection when they were first hired. "We gave them a 10-minute orientation, 
	then they were out on the floor," Smith says. She addressed the weakness by creating a mentoring program that matched new hires 
	with experienced workers. The latter were suspicious at first, but eventually, the mentor positions (with spiffy shirts and caps) 
	came to be seen as prestigious. The six-month turnover rate dropped dramatically, to 16%. Attendance and productivity -- and the 
	damaged-goods rate -- improved. 
	"We don't wait to hear from top management," Smith says. "You can't just sit in the corner and look at benefits. We have to know 
	what the issues in our business are. HR has to step up and assume responsibility, not wait for management to knock on our door."
	
	But most HR people do. 
	Hunter Douglas gives us a glimmer of hope -- of the possibility that HR can be done right. And surely, even within 
	ineffective human-resources organizations, there are great individual HR managers -- trustworthy, caring people with their ears 
	to the ground, who are sensitive to cultural nuance yet also understand the business and how people fit in. Professionals who move 
	voluntarily into HR from line positions can prove especially adroit, bringing a profit-and-loss sensibility and strong management 
	skills. 
	At Yahoo, Libby Sartain, chief people officer, is building a group that may prove to be the truly effective human-resources department 
	that employees and executives imagine. In this, Sartain enjoys two advantages. First, she arrived with a reputation as a creative 
	maverick, won in her 13 years running HR at Southwest Airlines. And second, she had license from the top to do whatever it took 
	to create a world-class organization. 
	Sartain doesn't just have a "seat at the table" at Yahoo; she actually helped build the table, instituting a weekly operations 
	meeting that she coordinates with COO Dan Rosensweig. Talent is always at the top of the agenda -- and at the end of each meeting, 
	the executive team mulls individual development decisions on key staffers. 
	That meeting, Sartain says, "sends a strong message to everyone at Yahoo that we can't do anything without HR." It also signals 
	to HR staffers that they're responsible for more than shuffling papers and getting in the way. "We view human resources as the caretaker 
	of the largest investment of the company," Sartain says. "If you're not nurturing that investment and watching it grow, you're not 
	doing your job." 
	Yahoo, say some experts and peers at other organizations, is among a few companies -- among them Cardinal Health, Procter & Gamble, 
	Pitney Bowes, Goldman Sachs, and General Electric -- that truly are bringing human resources into the realm of business strategy. 
	But they are indeed the few. USC professor Edward E. Lawler III says that last year HR professionals reported spending 23% of their 
	time "being a strategic business partner" -- no more than they reported in 1995. And line managers, he found, said HR is far less 
	involved in strategy than HR thinks it is. "Despite great huffing and puffing about strategy," Lawler says, "there's still a long 
	way to go." (Indeed. When I asked one midlevel HR person exactly how she was involved in business strategy for her division, she 
	excitedly described organizing a monthly lunch for her vice president with employees.) 
	What's driving the strategy disconnect? London Business School's Gratton spends a lot of time training human-resources professionals 
	to create more impact. She sees two problems: Many HR people, she says, bring strong technical expertise to the party but no "point 
	of view about the future and how organizations are going to change." And second, "it's very difficult to align HR strategy to business 
	strategy, because business strategy changes very fast, and it's hard to fiddle around with a compensation strategy or benefits to 
	keep up." More than simply understanding strategy, Gratton says, truly effective executives "need to be operating out of a set of 
	principles and personal values." And few actually do. 
	In the meantime, economic natural selection is, in a way, taking care of the problem for us. Some 94% of large employers surveyed 
	this year by Hewitt Associates reported they were outsourcing at least one human-resources activity. By 2008, according to the survey, 
	many plan to expand outsourcing to include activities such as learning and development, payroll, recruiting, health and welfare, 
	and global mobility. 
	Which is to say, they will farm out pretty much everything HR does. The happy rhetoric from the HR world says this is all for 
	the best: Outsourcing the administrative minutiae, after all, would allow human-resources professionals to focus on more important 
	stuff that's central to the business. You know, being strategic partners. 
	The problem, if you're an HR person, is this: The tasks companies are outsourcing -- the administrivia -- tend to be what you're 
	good at. And what's left isn't exactly your strong suit. Human resources is crippled by what Jay Jamrog, executive director of the 
	Human Resource Institute, calls "educated incapacity: You're smart, and you know the way you're working today isn't going to hold 
	10 years from now. But you can't move to that level. You're stuck." 
	That's where human resources is today. Stuck. "This is a unique organization in the company," says USC's Boudreau. "It discovers 
	things about the business through the lens of people and talent. That's an opportunity for competitive advantage." In most companies, 
	that opportunity is utterly wasted. 
	And that's why I don't like HR. 
	Keith H. Hammonds is Fast Company's deputy editor. 
	A majority of IT professionals judge their current managers as graders (61%) versus teachers (26%), but it's more important to 
	create a nurturing workplace than a pass/fail department, Silver said. 
	
		"There will always be a need for some grading, but the emphasis should be on teaching. Tech professionals do their best work 
		when it's a safe environment to try new solutions, explore alternatives and fail," Silver said. "Over time, wisdom gained equals 
		fewer mistakes, cutting quickly to the best solution and increasing production. That's a pretty good payback." 
	
	If tech employees don't feel valued,
	they're going to jump 
	ship. Turnover has fallen below average for 41 months in a row, according to the U.S. Bureau of 
	Labor Statistics, but tech managers can't count on a struggling economy and
	tight job market to keep 
	their departments staffed. Good talent will flee, Silver says. 
	
		"Frankly, companies haven't felt the repercussions of subpar workplaces in the last three years. But, the gap between the 
		importance of the employee-manager relationship and the way it's developing is unacceptable. Both sides need to remember this 
		is a lasting connection and one worth the effort." 
	
	Darth Vader
	
		Tech managers always look to their vendor for guidance as to what to do with their tech people. Vendors, after all, compete 
		with similar skills in techs since they build and sometimes even use the products and tools the client tech managers deal with 
		on daily basis.
		When vendors like IBM have been treating their tech skills asset like dirt and call them "resources", it is a surprise that 
		the client managers of those same skills don't do the same thing?
		Until the hypocrisy of calling tech people vital but treating them like "human resources" ends we will continue to have this 
		management problem. If and when the economy turns around. the new rising young generation of cynical 
		and self-centered tech employees which these management practices have created will come to roost to American business. 
		
	
	
	You may think you're getting more accomplished by working longer hours. You're probably wrong. 
	There's been a flurry of recent coverage
	praising Sheryl Sandberg, 
	the chief operating officer of Facebook, for
	leaving 
	the office every day at 5:30 p.m. to be with her kids.  Apparently she's been doing this for years, but only recently "came 
	out of the closet," as it were.What's insane is that Sandberg felt the need to hide the fact, since there's a century of research 
	establishing the undeniable fact that working more than 40 hours per week actually decreases productivity.
	In the early 1900s, Ford Motor ran dozens of tests to discover the optimum work hours for worker productivity.  They discovered 
	that the "sweet spot" is 40 hours a week–and 
	that, while adding another 20 hours provides a minor increase in productivity, that increase only lasts for three to four weeks,
	and then turns negative. 
	Anyone who's spent time in a corporate environment knows that what was true of factory workers a hundred years ago is true of 
	office workers today. People who put in a solid 40 hours a week get more done than those who regularly work 60 or more hours.
	
	The workaholics (and their profoundly misguided management) may think they're accomplishing more than the less fanatical worker, 
	but in every case that I've personally observed, the long hours result in work that must be scrapped or redone. 
	Accounting for Burnout What's more, people who consistently work long work weeks get burned out and 
	inevitably start having personal problems that get in the way of getting things done. 
	I remember a guy in one company I worked for who used the number of divorces in his group as a measure of its productivity. Believe 
	it or not, his top management reportedly considered this a valid metric. What's ironic (but not surprising) is that the group itself 
	accomplished next to nothing. 
	In fact, now that I think about it, that's probably why he had to trot out such an absurd (and, let's face it, evil) metric.
	
	Proponents of long work weeks often point to the even longer average work weeks in countries like Thailand, Korea, and Pakistan–with 
	the implication that the longer work weeks are creating a competitive advantage. 
	Europe's Ban on 50-Hour Weeks. 
	However, the facts don't bear this out.  In six of
	the top 10 most competitive countries in the 
	world (Sweden, Finland, Germany, Netherlands, Denmark, and the United Kingdom), it's
	illegal to demand more than a 48-hour work week.  You 
	simply don't see the 50-, 60-, and 70-hour work weeks that have become de rigeur in some parts of the U.S. business world.
	If U.S. managers were 
	smart, they'd end this "if you don't come in on Saturday, don't bother coming to work on Sunday" idiocy.  If you want employees 
	(salaried or hourly) to get the most done–in the shortest amount of time and on a consistent basis–40 hours a week is just about 
	right.
	In other words, nobody should be apologizing for leaving at work at a reasonable hour like 5:30 p.m. In fact, people should be 
	apologizing if they're working too long each week–because it's probably making the team less effective overall. 
	JW on TechWhittaker, 
	who joined Google in 2009 and left last month, described a corporate culture clearly divided into two eras: "Before Google+," and 
	"After." 
	"After" is pretty terrible, in his view. 
	Google (GOOG,
	Fortune 
	500) once gave its engineers the time and resources to be creative. That experimental approach yielded several home-run hits 
	like Chrome and Gmail. But Google fell behind in one key area: competing with Facebook. 
	That turned into corporate priority No. 1 when Larry Page took over as the company's CEO. "Social" became Google's battle cry, 
	and anything that didn't support Google+ was viewed as a distraction. 
	"Suddenly, 20% meant half-assed," wrote Whittaker, referring to Google's famous policy of letting employees spend a fifth of 
	their time on projects other than their core job. "The trappings of entrepreneurship were dismantled."
	Whittaker is not the first ex-Googler to express that line of criticism. Several high-level employees have left after complaining 
	that the "start-up spirit" of Google has been replaced by a more mature but staid culture focused on the bottom line.
	The interesting thing about Whittaker's take is that it was posted not on his personal blog, but on 
	an official blog of Microsoft (MSFT,
	Fortune 
	500), Google's arch nemesis. 
	Spokesmen from Microsoft and Google declined to comment.
	The battle between Microsoft and Google has heated up recently, as the Federal Trade Commission and the European Commission begin 
	to investigate Google for potential antitrust violations. Microsoft, with its Bing search engine, has doubled its share of the search 
	market since its June 2010 founding, but has been unsuccessful at taking market share away from Google. 
	Microsoft is increasingly willing to call out Google for what it sees as illicit behavior. A year ago, 
	the software company released a long list of gripes about Google's
	monopolistic actions, 
	and last month it said Google was
	violating Internet 
	Explorer users' privacy.
	Despite his misgivings about what Google cast aside to make Google+ a reality, Whittaker thinks that the social network was worth 
	a shot. If it had worked -- if Google had dramatically changed the social Web for the better -- it would have been a heroic gamble.
	But it didn't. It's too early to write Google+ off, but the site is developing a reputation as a ghost 
	town. Google says 90 million 
	people have signed up, but analysts and anecdotal evidence show that fairly few have turned into heavy users. 
	"Google was the rich kid who, after having discovered he wasn't invited to the party, built his own 
	party in retaliation," Whittaker wrote. "The fact that no one came to Google's party became the elephant in the room." 
	
	
	Ian Smith:
	
		Isn't it inevitable that Google will end up like Microsoft. A brain-dead dinosaur employing sycophantic middle class bores, 
		who are simply working towards a safe haven of retirement. In the end Google will be passed by. It's not a design-led innovator 
		like Apple: it's a boring, grey utilitarian, Soviet-like beast. Google Apps are cheap - but very nasty - Gmail is a terrible 
		UI - and great designers will never work for this anti-design/pro-algorithms empire.
	
	Steve
	
		I have to be honest with you. All of Google's products are TERRIBLE except for Gmail, and even that is inferior to Outlook 
		on the web now. 
		I used Google Apps for years, and Google just doesn't listen to customers. The 
		engineers that ran the company needed some corporate intervention. I just think Larry Page tried to turn Google into a different 
		company, rather than just focusing the great ideas into actually great products.
	
	Matt:
	
		It seems the tech titans all have this pendulum thing going on. Google appears to be beginning its swing in the "evil" direction. 
		Apple seems like they're nearing the peak of "evil". And Microsoft seems like they're back in the middle, trying to swing up 
		to the "good" side. So, if you look at it from that perspective, Microsoft is the obvious choice. 
		Good luck!
	
	VVR:
	
		The stark truth in this insightful piece is the stuff you have not written.. 
		Atleast you had a choice in leaving google. But we as users don't. 
		I have years of email in Gmail and docs and youtube etc. I can't switch. 
		"Creepy" is not the word that comes to mind when Ads for Sauna, online textbooks, etc suddenly 
		begin to track you, no matter which website you visit. 
		You know you have lost when this happens..
	
	David:
	
		A fascinating insight, I think this reflects what a lot of people are seeing of Google from the outside. It seems everybody 
		but Page can see that Google+ is - whilst technically brilliant - totally superfluous; your daughter is on the money. Also apparent 
		from the outside is the desperation that surrounds Google+ - Page needs to face facts, hold his hands up and walk away from 
		Social before they loose more staff like you, more users and all the magic that made Google so great. 
		Best of luck with your new career at Microsoft, I hope they foster and encourage you as the Google of old did.
	
	Raymond Traylor:
	
		I understand Facebook is a threat to Google search but beating Facebook at their core competency was doomed to fail. Just 
		like Bing to Google. I was so disappointed in Google following Facebook's evil ways of wanting to know everything about me I've 
		stopped using their services one at a time, starting with Android. 
		I am willing to pay for a lot of Google's free service to avoid advertising and harvesting my private data.
	
	root
	
	
		You claim old Google empowered intelligent people to be innovative, with the belief their creations 
		would prove viable in the marketplace. You then go on to name Gmail and Chrome as the accomplishments of that endeavour. Are 
		you ****** serious? Re-branding web based email is no more innovative than purchasing users for your social networking site, 
		like Facebook did. Same for Chrome, or would you argue Google acquiring VOIP companies to then provide a mediocre service called 
		Google Voice was also innovative? When you arrived at Google it had already turned the internet into a giant spamsense depository 
		with the majority of screen real estate consumed by Google's ads. The downhill spiral did not begin with Google+, but it may 
		end there. On a lighter note, you are now free. Launch a start-up and fill the gaping hole which will be left by the fall of 
		the former giant. 
	
	RBLevin:
	
		Great post. Appreciate the insights the warning about what happens when bottom-up entrepreneurship loses out to top-down 
		corporate dictums. 
		Re: sharing, while I agree sharing isn't broken (heck, it worked when all we had was email), it certainly needs more improvement. 
		I can't stand Facebook. Hate the UI, don't care for the culture. Twitter is too noisy and, also, the UI sucks. I'm one of those 
		who actually thinks Google+ got 21st century BBSing right. 
		But if that's at the cost of everything else that made Google great, then it's a high price to pay. 
		BTW, you can say a lot of these same things about similar moves Microsoft has made over the years, where the top brass decided 
		they knew better, and screwed over developers and their investments in mountains of code. 
		So, whether it happens in an HR context or a customer context, it still sucks as a practice.
	
	bound2run: 
	
		I have made a concerted effort to move away from Google products after their recent March 1st privacy 
		policy change. I must say the Bing is working just fine for me. Gmail will be a bit tougher but I am making strides. Now I just 
		need to dump my Android phone and I will be "creepy-free" ... for the time being.
	
	Phil Ashman:
	
		The ability to actually consume shared content in an efficient and productive manner is still as broken as ever. They never 
		addressed the issue in Buzz and still haven't with G+ despite people ranting at them for this functionality forever. 
		Funny that I should read your post today as I wrote the following comment on another persons post a couple days back over 
		Vic's recent interview where someone brought up the lack of a G+ API: 
		"But if it were a social network.......then they are doing a pretty piss poor job of managing the G+ interface and productive 
		consumption of the stream. It would be nice if there was at least an API so some 3rd party clients could assist with the filtering 
		of the noise, but in reality the issue is in the distribution of the stream. What really burns me is that it wouldn't be that 
		hard for them to create something like subscribable circles. 
		Unfortunately the reality is that they just don't care about whether the G+ stream is productive for you at the moment as 
		their primary concern isn't for you to productively share and discuss your interests with the world, but to simply provide a 
		way for you to tell Google what you like so they can target you with advertising. As a result, the social part of Google+ really 
		isn't anything to shout about at the moment." 
		You've just confirmed my fear about how the company's focus has changed.
	
	Alice Wonder:
	
		Thanks for this. I love many of the things Google has done. Summer of code, WebM, Google Earth, free web fonts, etc. 
		I really was disappointed with Google+. I waited for an invite, and when I finally got one, I started to use it. Then the 
		google main search page started to include google+ notifications, and the JS crashed my browser. Repeatedly. I had to clear 
		my cache and delete my cookies just so google wouln't know it was me and crash search with a notification. They fixed that issue 
		quickly but I did not understand why they would risk their flagship product (search) to promote google plus. The search page 
		really should be a simple form. 
		And google plus not allowing aliases? Do I want a company that is tracking everything I do centrally to have my real name 
		with that tracking? No. Hence I do not use google+ anymore, and am switching to a different search engine and doing as little 
		as I can with google. 
		I really don't like to dislike google because of all they have done that was cool, it is really sad for me to see this happening.
	
	Mike Whitehead
	
		Sounds like Google have stopped focusing on what problem they're solving and moving onto trying 
		to influence consumer behaviour - always a much more difficult trick to pull off. Great article - well done for sharing in such 
		a humble and ethical manner. Best of luck for the future.
	
	jmacdonald 14 Mar 2012 4:07 AM great write-up 
	
		personally i think that google and facebook have misread the sociological trend against the toleration of adverts, to such 
		an extent that if indeed google are following the 'facebook know everything and we do too' route, i suspect both companies may 
		enter into issues as the advertising CPMs fall and we're left with us wretched consumers who find ways around experiences that 
		we don't want 
		more on this stuff here: www.jonathanmacdonald.com 
		and here: www.jonathanmacdonald.com 
		for anyone that cares about that kinda angle
	
	Mahboob Ihsan:
	
		Google products are useful but probably they could have done more to improve the GUI, Standardization 
		and Usability. You can continue to earn business in short term enjoying your strategic advantage as long as you don't have competitors. 
		But as soon as you have just one competitor offering quality products at same cost, your strategic advantage is gone and you 
		have to compete through technology, cost and quality. Google has been spreading its business wings to so many areas, probably 
		with the single point focus of short term business gains. Google should have learnt from Apple that your every new offering 
		should be better (in user's eye) than the previous one.
	
	Victor Ramirez:
	
		 Thanks for the thoughtful blog post. Anybody who has objectively observed Google's behavior 
		and activity over the past few years has known that Google is going in this direction. I think that people have to recognize 
		that Google, while very technically smart, is an advertising company first and foremost. Their motto says the right things about 
		being good and organizing the world's information, but we all know what Google is honestly interested in. The thing that Google 
		is searching for, more than almost anything else, is about getting more data about people so they can get people better ads 
		they'll be more likely to click on so they make more money. Right now, Google is facing what might be considered an existential 
		threat from Facebook because they are the company that is best able to get social data right now. Facebook is getting so much 
		social data that odds are that they're long-term vision is to some point seriously competing in search using this social data 
		that they have. Between Facebook's huge user-base and momentum amongst businesses (just look at how many Super Bowl ads featured 
		Facebook pages being promoted for instance, look at the sheer number of companies listed at www.buyfacebookfansreviews.com that 
		do nothing other than promote Facebook business pages, and look at the biggest factor out there - the fact that Facebook's IPO 
		is set to dominate 2012) I think that Facebook has the first legitimate shot of creating a combination of quality results and 
		user experience to actually challenge Google's dominance, and that's pretty exciting to watch. The fact that Google is working 
		on Google+ so much and making that such a centerpiece of their efforts only goes to illustrate how critical this all is and 
		how seriously they take this challenge from Facebook into their core business. I think Facebook eventually enters the search 
		market and really disrupts it and it will be interesting to see how Google eventually acts from a position of weakness.
	
	Keith Watanabe:
	
		they're just like any company that gets big. you end up losing visibility into things, believe that you require the middle 
		management layer to coordinate, then start getting into the battlegrounds of turf wars because the people hired have hidden 
		agendas and start bringing in their army of yes men to take control as they attempt to climb up the corporate ladder. however, 
		the large war chest accumulated and the dominance in a market make such a company believe in their own invulnerability. but 
		that's when you're the most vulnerable because you get sloppy, forget to stop and see the small things that slip through the 
		cracks, forget your roots and lose your way and soul. humility is really your only constant savior. 
		btw, more than likely Facebook will become the same way. And any other companies who grow big. People tend to forget about 
		the days they were struggling and start focusing on why they are so great. You lose that hunger, that desire to do better because 
		you don't have to worry about eating pinches of salt on a few nibbles of rice. This is how civilization just is. If you want 
		to move beyond that, humans need to change this structure of massive growth -> vanity -> decadence 
		-> back to poverty.
	
	Anon:
	
		This perceived shift of focus happens at every company when you go from being an idealistic student 
		to becoming an adult that has to pay the bills. When you reach such a large scale with so much at stake, it is 
		easy to stop innovating. It is easy to get a mix of people who don't share the same vision when you have to hire on a lot of 
		staff. Stock prices put an emphasis on perpetual monetization. Let's keep in mind that Facebook only recently IPO'd and in the 
		debate for personal privacy, all the players are potentially "evil" and none of them are being held to account by any public 
		policy. 
		The shutdown of Google Labs was a sad day. Later the shutdown of Google Health I thought was also sad as it was an example 
		of a free service already in existence, akin to what Ontario has wasted over $1 billion on for E-Health.
		Surely these closures are a sign that the intellectual capital in the founders has been exhausted. 
		They took their core competencies to the maximum level quickly, which means all the organic growth in those areas is mostly 
		already realized. 
		There needs to be some torch passing or greater empowerment in the lower ranks when things like this happen. Take a look 
		at RIM. Take a look at many other workplaces. It isn't an isolated incident. There are constantly pressures between where you 
		think your business should go, where investors tell you to go, and where the industry itself is actually headed. This guy is 
		apparently very troubled that his name is attached to G+ development and he is trying to distance himself from his own failure. 
		Probably the absence of Google Labs puts a particular emphasis on the failure of G+ as one of the only new service projects 
		to be delivered recently. 
		After so much time any company realizes that new ideas can only really come with new people or from outside influences. As 
		an attempt to grow their business services via advertising, the idea that they needed to compete with Facebook to continue to 
		grow wasn't entirely wrong. It was just poorly executed, too late, and at the expense of potentially focusing their efforts 
		on doing something else under Google Labs that would have been more known as from them (Android was an acquisition, not organically 
		grown internally). There is no revolution yet, because Facebook and Google have not replaced any of each others services with 
		a better alternative
		The complaints in the final paragraph of the blog regarding privacy are all complaints about how much Google wants to be 
		Facebook. Thing is that Google+ just like all the aforementioned services are opt-in services with 
		a clear ToS declared when you do so, even if you already have a Google account for other services. The transparency 
		of their privacy policy is on par if not better than most other competing service providers. The only time it draws criticism 
		is when some changes have been made to say that if you use multiple services, they may have access to the same pool of information 
		internally. It's a contract and it was forced to be acknowledged when it changed. When advertising does happen it is much more 
		obvious to me that it is advertising via a Google service, than when Facebook decides to tell me who likes what. Not to give 
		either the green light here; but the evolution is one of integrating your network into the suggestions, and again, it isn't 
		isolated to any one agency. 
		One way to raise and enforce objections to potential mishandling of information is to develop a blanket minimum-requirement 
		on privacy policy to apply to all businesses, regarding the handling of customer information. We are blind if we think Google+ 
		and Facebook are the only businesses using data in these ways. This blanket minimum requirement could be voluntarily adopted 
		via 3rd party certification, or it could be government enforced; but the point is that someone other than the business itself 
		would formulate it, and it must be openly available to debate and public scrutiny/revision. It is a sort of "User License Agreement" 
		for information about us. If James Whittaker left to partake in something along these lines, it sure would make his blog entry 
		more credible, unless Microsoft is focused so much more greatly on innovation than the profit motive.
		It is also important for customers and the general public not to get locked into any kind of 
		brand loyalty. One problem is Facebook is a closed proprietary system with no way to forward or export the data 
		contained within it to any comparable system. Google is a mish-mash of some open and some closed systems. In order for us as 
		customers to be able to voice our opinions in a way that such service providers would hear, we must be provided alternatives 
		and service portability. 
		As an example of changing service providers, there has been an exodus of business customers away from using Google Maps as 
		they began charging money to businesses that want to use the data to develop on top of it. I think that this is just the reality 
		of a situation when you have operating costs for a service that you need to recoup; but there is a royalty-free alternative 
		like Open Street Map (which Apple has recently ripped off by using Open Street Map data without attribution). 
		Google won't see the same meteoric growth ever again. It probably is a less fun place for a social 
		media development staffer to work at from 2010 to present, than it was from 2004 - 2010 (but I'm betting still preferable to 
		FoxConn or anything anywhere near Balmer).
	
	Linda R. Tindall :
	
		Thank you for your honest comments Mr. Whittaker. And yes, Google is not like it was before.. 
		It is Scary, Google may destroy anyone online business overnight! 
		Google penalize webmasters if they don't like a Website for any reason. They can put out anyone they want out of business. 
		How does Google judge a webmaster's? 
		Google's business isn't anymore the search engine. Google's business is selling and displaying ads. 
		GOOGLE becomes now the Big Brother of the WWW. I think it is scary that Google has so much power. Just by making changes, 
		they can ruin people's lives. 
		 
	
	... ... ...
	It wasn't an easy decision to leave Google. During my time there I became fairly passionate about the company. I keynoted four 
	Google Developer Day events, two Google Test Automation Conferences and was a prolific contributor to the Google testing blog. Recruiters 
	often asked me to help sell high priority candidates on the company. No one had to ask me twice to promote Google and no one was 
	more surprised than me when I could no longer do so. In fact, my last three months working for Google was a whirlwind of desperation, 
	trying in vain to get my passion back.
	The Google I was passionate about was a technology company that empowered its employees to innovate. The Google I left was an 
	advertising company with a single corporate-mandated focus.
	Technically I suppose Google has always been an advertising company, but for the better part of the 
	last three years, it didn't feel like one. Google was an ad company only in the sense that a good TV show is an ad 
	company: having great content attracts advertisers.
	Under Eric Schmidt ads were always in the background. Google was run like an innovation factory, empowering employees to be entrepreneurial 
	through founder's awards, peer bonuses and 20% time. Our advertising revenue gave us the headroom to think, innovate and create. 
	Forums like App Engine, Google Labs and open source served as staging grounds for our inventions. The fact that all this was paid 
	for by a cash machine stuffed full of advertising loot was lost on most of us. Maybe the engineers who actually worked on ads felt 
	it, but the rest of us were convinced that Google was a technology company first and foremost; a company that hired smart people 
	and placed a big bet on their ability to innovate.
	From this innovation machine came strategically important products like Gmail and Chrome, products that were the result of entrepreneurship 
	at the lowest levels of the company. Of course, such runaway innovative spirit creates some duds, and Google has had their share 
	of those, but Google has always known how to fail fast and learn from it.
	In such an environment you don't have to be part of some executive's inner circle to succeed. You don't have to get lucky and 
	land on a sexy project to have a great career. Anyone with ideas or the skills to contribute could get involved. I had any number 
	of opportunities to leave Google during this period, but it was hard to imagine a better place to work.
	But that was then, as the saying goes, and this is now.
	It turns out that there was one place where the Google innovation machine faltered and that one place mattered a lot: competing 
	with Facebook. Informal efforts produced a couple of antisocial dogs in Wave and Buzz. Orkut never caught on outside Brazil. Like 
	the proverbial hare confident enough in its lead to risk a brief nap, Google awoke from its social dreaming to find its front runner 
	status in ads threatened.
	Google could still put ads in front of more people than Facebook, but Facebook knows so much more about those people. Advertisers 
	and publishers cherish this kind of personal information, so much so that they are willing to put the Facebook brand before their 
	own. Exhibit A: www.facebook.com/nike, a company with the power and clout of Nike putting their own brand after Facebook's? 
	No company has ever done that for Google and Google took it personally.
	Larry Page himself assumed command to right this wrong. Social became state-owned, a corporate mandate 
	called Google+. It was an ominous name invoking the feeling that Google alone wasn't enough. Search had to be social. 
	Android had to be social. You Tube, once joyous in their independence, had to be … well, you get the point. Even worse was that 
	innovation had to be social. Ideas that failed to put Google+ at the center of the universe were a distraction.
	Suddenly, 20% meant half-assed. Google Labs was shut down. App Engine fees were raised. 
	APIs that had been free for years were deprecated or provided for a fee. As the trappings of entrepreneurship were dismantled, derisive 
	talk of the "old Google" and its feeble attempts at competing with Facebook surfaced to justify a "new Google" that promised "more 
	wood behind fewer arrows."
	The days of old Google hiring smart people and empowering them to invent the future was gone. The new Google knew 
	beyond doubt what the future should look like. Employees had gotten it wrong and corporate intervention would set it right again.
	
	Officially, Google declared that "sharing is broken on the web" and nothing but the full force of our collective minds around 
	Google+ could fix it. You have to admire a company willing to sacrifice sacred cows and rally its talent behind a threat to its 
	business. Had Google been right, the effort would have been heroic and clearly many of us wanted to be part of that outcome. I bought 
	into it. I worked on Google+ as a development director and shipped a bunch of code. But the world never changed; sharing never changed. 
	It's arguable that we made Facebook better, but all I had to show for it was higher review scores.
	As it turned out, sharing was not broken. Sharing was working fine and dandy, Google just wasn't part of it. People were sharing 
	all around us and seemed quite happy. A user exodus from Facebook never materialized. I couldn't even 
	get my own teenage daughter to look at Google+ twice, "social isn't a product," she told me after I gave her a demo, "social is 
	people and the people are on Facebook." 
	Google was the rich kid who, after having discovered he wasn't invited to the party, built his own party in retaliation. The 
	fact that no one came to Google's party became the elephant in the room. 
"...common sense is dead in the corporate world..."
	
	
		My department must hold the record for the company's fastest revolving door. In less than a year, we've been re-orged three 
		times. I've had four different managers, and every new person who comes in wants to 'mark his territory.' Meanwhile, 
		none of these people know as much about my area as I do, so their guidance is useless. Plus, I'm 
		changing direction so much I never get anything done. What is it they say-same sh*t different day? If I have 
		to be 'rah rah' at yet another welcome lunch, I think I'm going to explode.
		Robert, 27, Oregon
	
	If you're reading this chapter because you're struggling with someone's attitude problem at work, you're not alone, and your 
	hostility is probably justified. I've spoken to dozens of twenty-somethings, and most have spent their fair share of time banging 
	their heads against the wall and regretting the day they signed their offer letters.
	As much as I feel your pain, I don't believe it does much good to complain, because unless you're going to grad school or can 
	successfully start your own business, you're in the corporate world to stay. We all have to deal with business-world insanity whether 
	we love our jobs or not, so we might as well take the necessary steps to overcome the challenges. However, because this chapter 
	is about your emotional well-being, we need to start by recognizing the things about work that drive us nuts. Most of these points 
	will probably sound familiar, so read on and be comforted. Warning: Do not hang this list in your cube!
	Top 10 Annoying Things About the Corporate World
	
		- Corporate Déjŕ Vu. It seems as though it's a requirement in corporate business that you spend huge amounts of time 
		reporting the same information in a dozen different formats, attending status meetings where conversation from the week before 
		is repeated word for word, and putting out the same fires, because your department doesn't learn from its mistakes.
  
		- Invoking Syndrome. The invoking syndrome occurs when colleagues try to persuade you to do what they want by name-dropping 
		someone higher up. Whether the executive manager was actually involved or not, invoking him is a manipulative tactic used to 
		get you to bend to your colleagues' wishes (for example, "Really? Well, I spoke to the CEO last night, and he told me we have 
		to do the event this way.")
  
		- Egomania. When certain people reach a high level in a company, they think that they are better than everyone else 
		and that they are entitled to be treated like a god. Regardless of the issue, they believe they are always right and that they 
		can't possibly learn anything from someone lower on the chain.
  
		- Hierarchies. In the corporate world, all men are not created equal, and sometimes you can actually get in trouble 
		just by talking to someone higher up without going through the proper channels. Unless you happen to know the right people, 
		you're invisible.
  
		- Denigration. In some companies, it's an unspoken rule that the younger you are, the less 
		respect you receive. Many senior managers are quick to call you on the carpet for situations that may or may not be your fault, 
		but they say nothing when you've done superior work.
  
		- Bureaucracy. How many departments does it take to screw in a lightbulb? Corporate business has a lengthy approval 
		process for everything, and companies delight in changing those processes constantly so that you're never sure which 
		10 departments you need to consult before a decision can be made.
  
		- Hypocrisy. Don't you just love the way some companies tout values such as quality, entrepreneurship, innovation, 
		and integrity, when they would be perfectly happy if their employees just kept quiet and never strayed from their designated 
		roles? If you've ever acted on your company's values and gotten burned for it, you are probably a victim of naked ambition 
		(when doing what's best for the company leaves you out in the cold).
  
		- Micromanagement. Twenty-somethings thrive on independence, yet some managers will bear down on you with critical 
		eyes at every minuscule stage of a project. Gotta sneeze? Better make sure your manager knows about it.
  
		- Uncommon Sense. I've read that common sense is dead in the corporate world. 
		The author almost sounded proud of this. People might make a joke of it, but this dearth of logical thought in corporate business 
		is kind of sad. It's also frustrating when the obviously correct way to do something is staring everyone right in the face, 
		and no one sees it.
  
		- Nonsensical Change. Every now and then, companies will decide to throw their departments up in the air and see where 
		all the pieces land. Yes, it's the corporate reorganization (aka the dreaded re-org). Despite the fact that it results 
		in mass confusion, greatly decreased productivity, and low employee morale, companies continue to do it year after year.
 
	
	Think your boss is a horror? Some of these film honchos probably make him or her look like
	Mother Teresa.
		- STAR WARS (1977) -- The scariest military boss of all time?
		Darth Vader. One disagreement and zappo, you're vaporized.
 
		- 9 TO 5 (1980) -- Three working women -- Jane Fonda,
		Lily Tomlin and
		Dolly Parton -- get revenge on
		Dabney Coleman, their sexist bigot of a boss. Retribution 
		was never so sweet.
 
		- WALL STREET (1987) -- Young, on-the-make stockbroker Bud Fox (Charlie 
		Sheen) goes to work for the "greed is good" guy, Gordon Gekko (Michael 
		Douglas). When Gekko tries to take down the airline Bud's dad (Martin 
		Sheen) works for, the young guy realizes Gordon is a slimeball.
 
		- WORKING GIRL (1988) -- High-powered boss (Sigourney 
		Weaver) is totally two-faced, tries to steal underling
		Melanie Griffith's ideas and her guy (Harrison 
		Ford).
 
		- GLENGARRY GLEN ROSS (1992) -- In one seven-minute scene,
		Alec Baldwin, playing a character named Blake, who browbeats 
		and threatens a group of real estate salesmen, proves 
		he's one of the most vicious bosses ever. "The good news is, you're fired. The bad news is, you've got one week to regain your 
		jobs -- starting tonight."
 
		- SWIMMING WITH SHARKS (1994) -- Young writer (Frank 
		Whaley) signs on as an assistant to a movie mogul (Kevin 
		Spacey) and discovers he's a screaming, abusive creep. Think
		Ari Gold of "Entourage," 
		but worse. Much worse.
 
		- THE DEVIL'S ADVOCATE (1997) -- Young attorney (Keanu 
		Reeves) discovers the head of his law firm (Al Pacino) 
		is actually Satan. Holy sulfur and brimstone!
 
		- OFFICE SPACE (1999) -- Workers at a software company are constantly bullied and harassed by their smarmy boss (Gary 
		Cole). Can payback be in the near future?
 
		- THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA (2006) -- Yet another demanding and insensitive boss from hell, this time a high-powered fashion 
		magazine editor (Meryl Streep) brutalizing her assistant 
		(Anne Hathaway). Can
		Anna Wintour really be this bad?
 
	
Anyone who has ever worked in a large corporation has seen the empty suits that seem to inexplicably rise to positions of 
power.  They talk a great game, possessing extraordinary verbal acuity, and often with an amazing ability to rise quickly without 
significant accomplishments to positions of great personal power, and often using it ruthlessly once it is achieved.  Their ruthless 
obsession with power and its visible rewards rises above the general level of narcissism and sycophancy that often plagues large organizations, 
especially those with an established franchise where performance is not as much of an issue as collecting their rents. And anyone 
who has been on the inside of the national political process knows this is certainly nothing exclusive to the corporate world.
	
	Anyone who has ever worked in a large corporation has seen the empty suits that seem to inexplicably rise to positions 
	of power.  They talk a great game, possessing extraordinary verbal acuity, and often with an amazing ability to rise quickly 
	without significant accomplishments to positions of great personal power, and often using it ruthlessly once it is achieved. 
	Their ruthless obsession with power and its visible rewards rises above the general level of narcissism and sycophancy that often 
	plagues large organizations, especially those with an established franchise where performance is not as much of an issue 
	as collecting their rents.
	And anyone who has been on the inside of the national political process knows this is certainly nothing exclusive to the corporate 
	world.
	Here is a paper recently published 
	in the Journal of Business Ethics that hypothesizes along these lines. It is only a preliminary paper, lacking in full scholarship 
	and a cycle of peer review. 
	But it raises a very important subject. Organizational theories such as the efficient markets hypothesis that assume rational 
	behavior on the part of market participants tends to fall apart in the presence of the irrational and selfish short term focus of 
	a significant minority of people who seek power, much less the top one percent of the psychologically ruthless. 
	Indeed, not only was previously unheard of behavior allowed, it became quite fashionable and desired in certain sections of American 
	management where ruthless pursuit of profits at any cost was highly prized and rewarded.  And if caught, well, only the little 
	people must pay for their transgressions.  The glass ceiling becomes a floor above which the ordinary rules do not apply.
	If you wish to determine the character of a generation or a people, look to their heroes, leaders, and role models.
	This is nothing new, but a lesson from history that has been unlearned. The entire system of checks and balances, of rule of 
	law, of transparency in government, of accountability and personal honor, is based on the premise that one cannot always count on 
	people to be naturally good and self-effacing. And further, that at times it seems that a relatively small group of corrupt people 
	can rise to power, and harm the very fabric of a society.
	
		'When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall one by one, an unpitied sacrifice in a contemptible struggle.'
		Edmund Burke
		'And remember, where you have a concentration of power in a few hands, all too frequently men with the mentality of gangsters 
		get control. History has proven that.'
		Lord Acton
	
	These things tend to go in cycles.  It will be interesting to see how this line of analysis progresses. I am sure we all have 
	a few candidates we would like to submit for testing.   No one is perfect or even perfectly average.  But systems 
	that assume as much are more dangerous than standing armies, since like finds like, and dishonesty and fraud can become epidemic 
	in an organization and a corporate culture, finally undermining the very law and principle of stewardship itself. 
	
		'Our government...teaches the whole people by its example. If the government becomes the lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for 
		law; it invites every man to become a law unto himself; it invites anarchy.'Louis D. Brandeis
	
	MF Global, and the reaction to it thus far, is one of the better examples of shocking behaviour that lately seems to be tolerated, 
	ignored,  and all too often met with weak excuses and lame promises to do better next time, while continuing on as before.
		"These corporate collapses have gathered pace in recent years, especially in the western world, and have culminated in the Global 
		Financial Crisis that we are now in.In watching these events unfold it often appears that the senior directors involved walk 
		away with a clean conscience and huge amounts of money. Further, they seem to be unaffected by the corporate collapses they 
		have created. They present themselves as glibly unbothered by the chaos around them, unconcerned about those who have lost their 
		jobs, savings, and investments, and as lacking any regrets about what they have done.
		They cheerfully lie about their involvement in events are very persuasive in blaming others for what has happened and have 
		no doubts about their own continued worth and value. They are happy to walk away from the economic disaster that they have managed 
		to bring about, with huge payoffs and with new roles advising governments how to prevent such economic disasters.
		Many of these people display several of the characteristics of psychopaths and some of them are undoubtedly true psychopaths. 
		Psychopaths are the 1% of people who have no conscience or empathy and who do not care for anyone other than themselves. 
		Some psychopaths are violent and end up in jail, others forge careers in corporations. The latter group who forge successful 
		corporate careers is called Corporate Psychopaths...
		Psychologists have argued that Corporate Psychopaths within organizations may be singled out for rapid promotion because 
		of their polish, charm, and cool decisiveness. Expert commentators on the rise of Corporate Psychopaths within modern corporations 
		have also hypothesized that they are more likely to be found at the top of current organisations than at the bottom.
		Further, that if this is the case, then this phenomenon will have dire consequences for the organisations concerned and for 
		the societies in which those organisations are based. Since this prediction of dire consequences was made the Global Financial 
		Crisis has come about. 
		Research by Babiak and Hare in the USA, Board and Fritzon in the UK and in Australia has shown that psychopaths are indeed 
		to be found at greater levels of incidence at senior levels of organisations than they are at junior levels (Boddy et al., 2010a). 
		There is also some evidence that they may tend to join some types of organisations rather than others and that, for example, 
		large financial organisations may be attractive to them because of the potential rewards on offer in these organizations."
		Clive R. Boddy, The Corporate Psychopaths Theory of the Global Financial Crisis,
		Journal of Business Ethics, 
		2011
	
	October 11, 2011 | Slashdot 
	miller60 writes with an except from a Data Center Knowledge article: "AOL has begun operations at a new
	data center 
	that will be completely unmanned, with all monitoring and management being handled remotely. The new 'lights out' facility is 
	part of a broader updating of AOL infrastructure that leverages virtualization and modular design to quickly deploy and manage server 
	capacity. 'These changes have not been easy,' AOL's Mike Manos writes in a blog post about the new facility. 'It's always
	culturally tough being open to fundamentally 
	changing business as usual.'" Mike Manos's weblog post provides a look into AOL's internal infrastructure. It's easy to 
	forget that AOL had to tackle scaling to tens of thousands of servers over a decade before the term Cloud was even coined.
	
	johnlcallaway (165670)
	
		Wow ... we were doing this 10 years ago before virtual systems were commonplace, 'computers on a card' where just coming 
		out. Data center was 90 miles away. 
		All monitoring and managing was done remotely. The only time we ever went to physical data center was if a physical piece 
		of hardware had to be swapped out. Multiple IP addresses were configured per server so any single server one one tier could 
		act as a fail over for another one on the same tier. 
		We used firewalls to automate failovers, hardware failures were too infrequent 
		to spend money on other methods. 
		We could rebuild Sun servers in 10 minutes from saved images. All software updates 
		were scripted and automated. A separate maintenance network was maintained. Logins were not allowed except on the maintenance 
		network, and all ports where shutdown except for ssh. 
		A remote serial interface provided hard-console access to each machine if the networks to a system wasn't available. 
	
	rubycodez:
	
		virtual systems were commonplace in the 1960s. But finally these bus-oriented microcomputers, and PC wintel type "servers" 
		have gotten into it. Young 'uns.......
	
	ebunga:
	
		Eh, machines of that era required constant manual supervision, and uptime was measured in hours, not months or years. That 
		doesn't negate the fact that many new tech fads are poor reimplementations of technology that died for very good reasons.
		
	
	timeOday:
	
		And other new tech fads are good reimplementations of ideas that didn't pan out in the past but are now feasible due to advances 
		in technology. You really can't generalize without looking at specifics - "somebody tried that a long time ago and it wasn't 
		worth it" doesn't necessarily prove anything. 
	
	rednip:
	
		"somebody tried that a long time ago and it wasn't worth it" doesn't necessarily prove anything. 
		Unless there is some change in technology or technique, past failures are a good indicator of continued inability. 
	
	timeOday:
	
		The tradeoff between centralized and decentralized computing is a perfect example of a situation where the technology is 
		constantly evolving at a rapid pace. Whether it's better to have a mainframe, a cluster, a distributed cluster (cloud), or fully 
		decentralized (peer-to-peer) varies from application to application and from year-to-year. None of those options can be ruled 
		in or out by making generalizations from the year 2000, let alone the 1960's.
	
	rickb928
	
		
		
		Two points
		
			- One - If there is redundancy and virtualization, AOL can certainly keep services running while a tech goes in, maybe 
			once a week, and swaps out the failed blades that have already been remotely disabled and their usual services relocated. 
			this is not a problem. Our outfit here has a lights-out facility that sees a tech maybe every few weeks, and other than 
			that a janitor keeps the dust bunnies at bay and makes sure the locks work daily. And yes, they've asked him to flip power 
			switches and tell them what color the lights were. He's gotten used to this. that center doesn't have state-of-the-art stuff 
			in it, either. 
 
			- Two - Didn't AOL run on a mainframe (or more than one) in the 90s? It predated anything useful, even the Web I think. 
			Netscape was being launched in 1998, Berners-Lee was making a NeXT browser in 1990, and AOL for Windows existed in 1991. 
			Mosaic and Lynx were out in 1993. AOL sure didn't need any PC infrastructure, it predated even Trumpet Winsock, I think, 
			and Linux. I don't think I could have surfed the Web in 1991 with a Windows machine, but I could use AOL. 
 
		
	
	
	Up the Ante:
	
		The NYT, 
		
			"Its ethos can be best summed up with the phrase "You are lucky to be here." " 
		
		A large part of me suspects that phrase became the dark humor lesson of 9/11 at the Times. That part of me still wonders 
		why one of the liners was not diverted at the last minute to inadvertently slam into NYT's HQ. 
	
	Some things just speak for themselves. Below you see an edited chain of e-mails that just reek of testosterone.The actors are 
	VP1, VP2 and VP3 (plus the usual cc: audience). Guess which one is me.
	The subject concerns all three, but they head up different divisions. Note the use of cc: and the time. In real life everyone 
	could see the e-mail history.
	
		From: VP1 
		To: Team of VP1
		cc: VP2;VP3
		Subject: Something that concerns us
		Time: 11:20 pm
		Team, I just want to inform you that we now have the funding to go ahead with XYZ. Please go ahead and execute as planned.
		Regards, 
		VP1
	
	Replies VP2 in a seemingly innocent tone:
	
		From: VP2
		To: VP1
		cc: Team of VP1;VP3
		Subject: Re: Something that concerns us
		Time: 11.30 pm
		VP1,
		Can you please share the details as you progress.
		Thanks,
		VP2 
	
	Enters VP3:
	
		From: VP3 
		To: VP1
		cc: Team of VP1;Team of VP2; CEO, CTO, CFO, CMO
		Subject: Re: Something that concerns us 
		Time: 11.45 pm
		All,
		I don't approve of this. How come I was not informed. It's the wrong approach and is basically a waste of money. It's not 
		planned properly and I ask you to stop all further activities!!!
		VP3 (From my Blackberry) 
	
	Replies VP1 patiently:
	
		From: VP1
		To: VP3
		cc: VP2
		Subject: Re: Something that concerns us
		Time: 12 pm
		VP3,
		I'm surprised to hear that you haven't heard of this. It was in the plan document that we reviewed two months ago and which 
		you approved.
		We're just executing that plan.
		If you have further questions don't hesitate to call me.
		Regards,
		VP1 
	
	Replies VP3 going for the kill:
	
		From: VP3
		To: VP1
		cc: Team of VP1;Team of VP2; CEO, CTO, CFO, CMO
		Subject: Re: Something that concerns us 
		Time: 12.15 pm
		VP1,
		it's not your call to decide on this. I have said that I don't approve and that's it. Stop further actions immediately.
		VP3
	
	Interacts VP2, making a reference to his earlier reply (50 minutes ago!), insinuating that VP1 hasn't delivered to his promise. 
	And re-invents himself as a a player in the approval chain.
	
		From: VP2 
		To: VP1, VP3
		cc: Team of VP1;Team of VP2; CEO, CTO, CFO, CMO
		Subject: Re: Something that concerns us 
		Time: 12.17 pm
		I haven't received the details I asked for yet. Please send so I can have an informed view. I'm not going to approve until 
		I know more.
		VP2
	
	So now VP1 is caught in a snag. The other two VPs who approved a plan just two months ago are now aiming for his throat.
	It continues for another couple of hours and it gets a lot nastier. I leave it up to you to do the analysis of the hidden agendas.
	This is not an atypical event in my daily routine.
	So who am I? Well, I'm not VP1.
[May 05, 2011]
Scripts OTN  by Prashant Pilankar (Infosys)
Sic transit gloria mundi ;-) 
Wikipedia: Sic transit gloria mundi is a
Latin
phrase that means "Thus passes the 
glory of the world." It has been interpreted as "Worldly things are fleeting." The phrase was used in the ritual of
papal coronation ceremonies between 1409 (when 
it was used at the coronation of Alexander 
V)[1] 
and 1963. As the newly chosen pope proceeded from the sacristy of
St. Peter's Basilica in his
sedia gestatoria, the procession stopped three 
times. On each occasion a papal master of ceremonies would fall to his knees before the pope, holding a silver or brass reed, 
bearing a tow of smoldering
flax. For three times in succession, as the cloth burned away, he 
would say in a loud and mournful voice, "Pater Sancte, sic transit gloria mundi!" ("Holy Father, so passes worldly glory!") These 
words, thus addressed to the pope, served as a reminder of the
transitory nature of 
life and earthly honors. The stafflike instrument used in the aforementioned ceremony is known as a "sic transit gloria mundi", 
named for the master of ceremonies' words.[2][3][4] 
A form of the phrase appeared in Thomas ŕ Kempis's 
1418 work
The Imitation of Christ: "O quam cito transit gloria mundi" ("How 
quickly the glory of the world passes away").[5][6]
	
	Recently had Submitted few of my Scripts on Oracle Technology Network 
	Portal and SUN BIGADMIN.Sharing few of them 
	SCRIPTS FOR SOLARIS ZFS ADMINISTRATION 
	
	http://www.sun.com/bigadmin/content/submitted/zfsufs_admin.jsp
	
	--------------------------------------------------------------------------
	
	Scripts for SOLARIS IPMP CONFIGURATION 
	
	http://www.sun.com/bigadmin/content/submitted/config_ipmp.jsp
	
	--------------------------------------------------------------------------
	
	Scripts for Administration of User and Group Accounts in Oracle Solaris
	
	
	
	https://codesamples.samplecode.oracle.com/servlets/tracking/id/S607
	
	Video :
	
	http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fNx7HtDrnZQ 
	---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
	
	Scripts for Administration of User and Group Accounts in Linux
	
	
	
	https://codesamples.samplecode.oracle.com/servlets/tracking/id/S610
	
	Video :
	
	http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eeecv606BKw 
	----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
	
	Script to Install Oracle 10g Software and Oracle Database in Solarisx86
	
	
	
	https://codesamples.samplecode.oracle.com/servlets/tracking/id/S594
	
	Video :
	
	http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pkiFKnEzbsY 
	----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
	
	Scripts for Performing RAID-1 Tasks in an Oracle Solaris Volume Manager 
	Environment 
	
	
	https://codesamples.samplecode.oracle.com/servlets/tracking/id/S640
	
	----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
	
	Scripts for LINUX LVM ADMINISTRATION 
	
	
	http://www.sun.com/bigadmin/content/submitted/lvm_admin.jsp 
	------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
	Scripts OTN (Part1) 
	Recently had Submitted few of my Scripts on Oracle Technology Network 
	Portal. 
	Sharing few of them. 
	SCRIPT TO MIRROR ROOT DISK IN SOLARIS USING VERITAS VOLUME MANAGER:
	
	
	https://codesamples.samplecode.oracle.com/servlets/tracking/id/S638
	
	Video :
	
	http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Ha4XbBLEZM 
	---------------------------------------------------------------------------
	
	SCRIPT FOR ONLINE DISK REPLACEMENT IN VERITAS VXVM , SVM, ZFS : 
	
	https://codesamples.samplecode.oracle.com/servlets/tracking?id=S575
	
	Video :
	
	http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hM0pyawZhXY&feature=related 
	---------------------------------------------------------------------------
	
	SCRIPT FOR ZONE CREATION AND ADMINISTRATION IN SOLARIS10: 
	
	https://codesamples.samplecode.oracle.com/servlets/tracking/id/S591
	
	Video :
	
	http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p42KECOdrYw 
	---------------------------------------------------------------------------
	
	Script for Enforcing Memory Cap on a Non Global Zone in Solaris 10:
	
	
	https://codesamples.samplecode.oracle.com/servlets/tracking?id=S584
	
	Script for Allocating CPU shares to Non Global zone in Solaris 10:
	
	
	https://codesamples.samplecode.oracle.com/servlets/tracking?id=S583
	
	Video :
	
	http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pSkHAuEJypU 
	----------------------------------------------------------------------------
	
	Scripts for Administration of Veritas Volume Manager in an Oracle 
	Solaris Environment 
	
	https://codesamples.samplecode.oracle.com/servlets/tracking/id/S597
	
	Video :
	
	http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xw_1Jx-OR2E&feature=related 
	----------------------------------------------------------------------------
	
	Script for Mirroring the Root Disk in an Oracle Solaris Volume Manager
	
	
	
	https://codesamples.samplecode.oracle.com/servlets/tracking/id/S605
	
	Video :
	
	http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yXyzaKLClz0&feature=related 
	----------------------------------------------------------------------------
	
	Solaris Jumpstart Server Configuration 
	
	
	https://codesamples.samplecode.oracle.com/servlets/tracking/id/S586
	
	Video :
	
	http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3HOydxvtZws 
	-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
	
	Scripts for Administration of Solaris Volume Manager 
	
	
	https://codesamples.samplecode.oracle.com/servlets/tracking/id/S607
	
	Video :
	
	http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RIJnKKzDL9I 
	-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
	
	Script for Creating a Link Aggregation in Solaris10 
	
	
	https://codesamples.samplecode.oracle.com/servlets/tracking/id/S589
	
	Video :
	
	http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PyzSePSMN5g&feature=related 
	-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
	
	Script for Simple Apache Configuration in an Oracle Solaris 10 Environment
	
	
	
	https://codesamples.samplecode.oracle.com/servlets/tracking/id/S641
	
	Video :
	
	http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aG8BV1xg83c 
	-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
	
	Script for Simple Apache Configuration in a Linux Environment 
	
	
	https://codesamples.samplecode.oracle.com/servlets/tracking/id/S646
	
	Video :
	
	http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oG43biH5Dl0 
	------------------------------------------------------------------------------
	
	Script for Simple Samba configuration in Solaris10: 
	
	
	https://codesamples.samplecode.oracle.com/servlets/tracking?id=S572
	
	Video :
	
	http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NPY03wnWGxM 
	------------------------------------------------------------------------------
	
	Script for Simple Samba Configuration in a Linux Environment 
	
	
	https://codesamples.samplecode.oracle.com/servlets/tracking/id/S653
	
	Video :
	
	http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fOtEbSE77_w 
	--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
	
	noc007 (633443)
	
		On the topic of outsourcing, IMO it can be cheaper if done right. 
		On paper it always seems like a great idea, but in practice it's 
		not always the best idea financially and/or getting the same or 
		better result in comparison to keeping it in-house. I've worked 
		for companies where they have outsourced a particular department/function 
		to companies where I am the one the job is outsourced to. My observation 
		has been the success of getting projects done (e.g.: programing) 
		or facilitating a role (e.g.: sys admin) rely on a few factors regardless 
		of outsourcing or not. 
		The first is a golden rule of sorts on doing anything:
		
		You can only pick two; NO exceptions. I've encountered so many 
		upper management types that foolishly think they can get away with 
		having all three. In my experience 9/10 of the time it turns out 
		a lack of quality bites them in the butt sometime down the road 
		when they assumed they somehow managed to achieve all three. 
		The second is communication. Mostly everyone in at least the 
		US has experienced the pain of being subjected to some company's 
		outsourced customer service and/or tech support that can't effectively 
		communicate with both parties on the same page of understanding 
		one another. I really shouldn't need to explain why communication, 
		understanding one another is so important. Sadly this is something 
		I have to constantly explain to my current boss with events like 
		today where my non-outsourced colleague rebooted a number of production 
		critical servers when he was asked to reboot just one secondary 
		server. 
		Third is the employee's skill in doing the job. Again, another 
		obvious one, but I've observed that it isn't always on the hiring 
		menu. Additionally I've seen some people that interview well, but 
		couldn't create a "Hello World" HTML page for a web developer position 
		as an example. There's no point in hiring or keeping a hired individual 
		to do a job that they lack the skill to do; even if it's an entry-level 
		position with training, that person should be willing to put for 
		the effort to learn and take notes. I accept that everyone has their 
		own unique skills that can aide or hinder their ability to learn 
		and be proficient with a particular task. However, I firmly believe 
		anyone can learn to do anything as long as they put their mind to 
		it. I barely have any artistic ability and my drawing skills are 
		stick figures at best (XKCD is miles ahead of me); if I were to 
		put forth the effort to learn how to draw and paint, I could become 
		a good artist. I taught an A+ technician certification class at 
		a tech school a while back and I had a retired Marine that served 
		in the Vietnam War as one of my students. One could argue his best 
		skill was killing and blowing stuff up. He worked hard and learned 
		to be a technician and passed CompTIA's certification test without 
		a problem. That leads me to the next point. 
		Lastly is attitude of the end employee doing the actual work. 
		It boggles my mind how so many managers loose the plot when it comes 
		to employee morale and motivation. Productivity generally is improved 
		when those two are improved and it usually doesn't have to involve 
		spending a bunch of money. The employee's attitude should be getting 
		the work done correctly in a reasonable amount of time. Demanding 
		it is a poor approach. Poisoning an employee will result in poisoning 
		the company in a small manner all the way up to the failure of the 
		company. Employees should be encouraged through actual morale improvements, 
		positive motivation, and incentives for doing more work at the same 
		and/or better quality level. 
		Outsourcing or keeping things in house can be successful and 
		possibly economical if approached correctly with the appropriate 
		support of upper management. 
	
	Max Littlemore (1001285)
	
		
			How dramatic? Isn't outsourcing done (like it or not) 
			to reduce costs? 
		
		Outsourcing is done to reduce the projected costs that PHBs see. 
		In reality, outsourcing can lead to increased costs and delays due 
		to time zone differences and language/cultural barriers. 
		I have seen it work reasonably well, but only when the extra 
		effort and delays caused by the increased need for rework that comes 
		from complex software projects. If you are working with others on 
		software, it is so much quicker to produce quality software if the 
		person who knows the business requirements is sitting right next 
		to the person doing design and the person cutting code and the person 
		doing the testing, etc, etc. 
		If these people or groups are scattered around the world with 
		different cultures and native languages, communication can suffer, 
		increasing misunderstanding and reducing the quality. I have personally 
		seen this lead to massive increase in code defects in a project 
		that went from in house development to outsourced. 
		Also, time zone differences cause problems. I have noticed that 
		the further west people live, the less likely they are to take into 
		account how far behind they are. Working with people who fail to 
		realise that their Monday morning is the next day for someone else, 
		or that by the time they are halfway through Friday, others are 
		already on their weekend is not only frustrating, it leads to slow 
		turn around of bug fixes, etc. 
		Yeah, I'm told outsourcing keeps costs down, but I am yet to 
		see conclusive evidence of that in the real world. At least in complex 
		development. YMMV for support/call centre stuff. 
		-- I don't therefore I'm not.
	
	
	jvonk: The cycle to hell
	
		
			I've got friends who work in hospital security who have 
			a devil of a time with people leaving their passwords and usernames 
			on sticky-notes everywhere. Building security has problems with 
			assholes defeating the building's fire alarm so they can sneak 
			out to a fire escape (or worse yet, a ground-floor alley) and 
			smoke and get back in. 
		
		You had me up until this point. While your cited cases might 
		be reasonable, there is also the all-to-frequent 
		case where "security" regulations induce this behavior. 
		
		What does hospital security expect users to do when users are 
		required to rotate passwords every two weeks, have a 12 character 
		long mix of upper/lowercase alpha's and numerics, and then also 
		be subject to a 7 password history non-reuse restriction? Security 
		is cognizant that the result of these provisions will be that users 
		write down their passwords on stickies, so how is this more secure 
		than allowing people to pick a less complex password and retain 
		it longer? 
		The answer is that this presumes that everyone is playing the 
		same game, with the goal to be the best possible security equilibrium 
		state balanced against inconvenience/usability. Running counter 
		to this is security's CYA factor: they experience no penalty for 
		the insane password restrictions that reduce overall security, because 
		if there is a security breach from the post-it passwords they can 
		dump all the blame on the hapless user for violating the published 
		security protocol that prohibits such actions. So, security has 
		a payoff table that disrupts the equilibrium resulting in the paradoxical, 
		reduced security steady state that is observed in these cases (ie. 
		security is externalizing the costs of implementing the high-grade 
		security practices). 
		The answer is that this presumes that everyone is playing the 
		same game, with the goal to be the best possible security equilibrium 
		state balanced against inconvenience/usability. Running counter 
		to this is security's CYA factor: they 
		experience no penalty for the insane password restrictions that 
		reduce overall security, because if there is a security breach from 
		the post-it passwords they can dump all the blame on the hapless 
		user for violating the published security protocol that prohibits 
		such actions. So, security has a payoff table that disrupts the 
		equilibrium resulting in the paradoxical, reduced security steady 
		state that is observed in these cases (ie. security 
		is externalizing the costs of implementing the high-grade security 
		practices). 
		PS. As for defeating the fire alarms, maybe they shouldn't 
		have turned the entire hospital into a "tobacco-free campus", with 
		the nearest "approved" smoking area located six blocks away. This 
		is basic psychology. Normal people like to abide by the rules/laws 
		even if they find them onerous, but there is a limit to their willingness 
		to comply. This is essentially what happened to the entire US during 
		the Prohibition. Again, as I said, your cited cases might be reasonable, 
		but I have seen many that were not. 
	
	DrgnDancer: The cycle to hell
	
		No offense (I'm an ops/security guy and I was nodding the whole 
		time till I thought about it), but this is exactly what the article 
		is talking about. Of course Marketing wants it shiny and iPhone 
		enabled. It's marketing, it's supposed to catch the eye and cause 
		people to pay attention. Of course management wants to save money.. 
		Money saved here is money that can used elsewhere or go into someone's 
		pocket (often management's of course, but in theory anyone's). Of 
		course Dev wants to have access to the live servers, there's info 
		they want/need on there and very rarely it actually is useful to 
		make changes on the fly when the situation is serious enough (It 
		shouldn't ever be, but we don't live in a perfect world). Of course 
		you want reliable, stable secure code that changes as little as 
		possible. 
		The solution isn't "Make all these other guys understand that 
		I'm right". It's to try to minimize the siloing so that everyone 
		has a say in process from the ground up. So the dev guy can tell 
		the marketing guy, "Hey you can't have iPhone *and* Flash. Do we 
		want to find a shiny that doesn't use Flash, or accept that iPhones 
		don't see our shiny?" Marketing can say to Ops "Ok that shiny I 
		wanted was insecure, I get that, is there a secure way to do something 
		similar?" Ops can say to Dev "I set you up a limited access account 
		on the live servers to collect the usage data you need, please don't 
		let it stack up." And Management can say to everyone "This is how 
		much we really have to spend and the results if we break budget."
		
		That way everyone can be an adult. There'll still be conflicts 
		of course, but if everyone knows that each group is legitimately 
		trying to facilitate everyone else, they can become points of discussion 
		and resolution instead of small scale wars that every side is trying 
		to "win". 
	
	nimbius : sysops being 
	
		the layer between which management absolves its direct interaction 
		with developers, and through which a SOX policy completely devoid 
		of any comprehension of the developer or her work is enforced.
	
	devnullkac: DBA vs. SysAdmin
		DBAs always seem to want root for some reason or other... with 
		apologies to A Few Good Men:
		SysAdmin: You want the authority?
		DBA: I think I'm entitled.
		SysAdmin: You want the authority?! 
		DBA: I want the root!
		SysAdmin: You can't handle the root! 
	
	ArhcAngel: Re:Network vs. Servers
	
		I worked for a rather large bank that was still using token ring 
		in the building I worked (This was about 8 years ago). One of the 
		PCs on the call center floor lost its network connectivity. I realized 
		her leased address had expired and it didn't get renewed. We'd had 
		problems with the ring hubs losing their IP Tables in the past so 
		I called the sysadmins and spent 3 hours 
		on the phone with a guy who insisted I didn't know what I was talking 
		about. During this time several other PCs had gone dark. I finally 
		jumped through all the hoops he insisted I try and he finally said..."hrmm...it 
		must be the IP Tables on the router. I'm not allowed to do anything 
		to those. Let me go get my boss." 
	
	khasim: Define "the network"
	
		
			Must be something wrong with your servers. 
		
		Remember that the network switches / hubs / routers are part 
		of "the network". 
		So when there REALLY is a problem on the network, the network 
		admins usually hear about it because EVERYONE is having problems 
		with ALL of their apps. 
		If one workstation or one server is having a problem (but the 
		others are working) then it probably isn't a problem with "the network".
		
		It may be that the network is not configured the way you'd like 
		it to be for whatever you're trying to do ... but remember that 
		the network admins have to keep the network configured to support 
		all the OTHER items that were on it before yours. 
		At least be able to tell them what you want to do protocol-wise.
		
	
	Anonymous Coward: Define "the network". 
	
		A-fucking-men. 
		I didn't completely understand why the networking team always 
		seemed so irritable when they would get called until I started doing 
		that job at another company. 
		Anything where one user can't get to one website, one file share 
		or their PC won't boot up is always suggested to be network related. 
		After the other people claim to check the file server(s), VMWare(if 
		it's a VDI client), etc., they come to me and it's up to me to prove 
		that it's not the network. Invariably, I end up owning the issue 
		and come to find that they locked out their AD account, they rearranged 
		their desk and plugged into the wrong wall jack, their PC has a 
		bad NIC (rare) or some other non-network related problem. 
		On the firewall/proxy side, am I the only one who HATES gotomeeting.com?
		
	
	frog_strat: The biggest challenges in this field 
	
	
		are not technical, they are interpersonal. Cognitive intelligence 
		is enough to get one started in this field, but gradually developing 
		knowledge our one's own mind, how to work with others, develop a 
		commitment to encouragement, and gaining a think skin are a must. 
		A lot of IT jobs are a disaster. But you can still find peace in 
		the middle of it if you develop the strength.
	
	DarthVain: You can't do it, we must do it. 
	
		I see this all the time in government. Various IT departments 
		will make it impossible or difficult for others to do work, but 
		limiting access to various things, restricting software, no allowing 
		for permissions, and refusing to take responsibility for a role 
		or function that might enable any of those things. 
		ME: I would like to do X. I need to have access to Y in order 
		to do X, may I have access please? IT Dept: A) No you cannot do 
		it, but we would happy to do it for an exorbitant sum, but we don't 
		have capacity now, so you will have to wait 6months. B) We are not 
		responsible for granting that access but please speak with RandomITDept 
		(who will immediately say its not their responsibility, and refer 
		you back), however we would happy to do it for an exorbitant sum, 
		but we don't have capacity now, so you will have to wait 6months.
		
		I understand the rational for limited access to certain things, 
		but the sole purpose for most of this seems to be to secure work 
		and thus positions for their particular IT department as well as 
		the power base for those managers so that their staffing and budgets 
		are justified. 
	
	quietwalker: It's hard to miss when your target is big 
	
		I've been at various times, a syadmin, a dba, sec/op, developer, 
		manager and even took my turns at answering the phones at one point 
		in time. Often, several of these roles at once. I've been on every 
		side of this issue, and if you wanted to take a stab at a generic 
		fix, it could be summed up simply: work 
		on your communication skills.I hate to plug agile, 
		but the focus on round table discussion 
		among all stakeholders really seems to be the way to go. 
		Aside from the criminal examples, the problems in the article all 
		stem from lack of understanding or an inability to explain. Making 
		the people who dream it (sales & marketing) sit with the people 
		who make it (developers, dbas), the people that make it go (admins, 
		security), and the people who say go or no-go (managers), is required 
		if you're going to churn out products with as little strife as possible. 
		Devs need requirements and tools, DBAs and Admins need hardware 
		budgets and usage estimates, Security needs the policy followed 
		or amended, Management needs to keep costs down and cycle time high, 
		and so on. You need to communicate this to all members, not just 
		via project managers.
		The article ends with a choice quote:
		
			"The top sources of conflict are the tech person's ego, poor 
			management, a lack of proper leadership, and allowing technical 
			people to make business decisions. The solution there is to 
			know your role and let your talents shine where they should."
		
		No. This is just a quote to sell services to non-technical management. 
		Paraphrased: "Those silly technical people have no social skills, 
		or business acumen. It's their all their fault, pay us to tell you 
		why" with a subtext of, 'use this to ensure your year-end bonus 
		to the board, and why only the grunts should be fired'.
		Everything in there perpetuates the 
		myth of the antisocial nerd, incapable of everything but a magic 
		control over computers.
		As an aside, I think the devs get it the worst. Requirements 
		always suck, always move, and often conflict, management always 
		moves up dates, removes people, adds features, and rearranges priorities 
		in the 11'th hour. Some companies don't allow devs to install local 
		software, slowing development. Most hardware allocation requests 
		have to come from them, instead of the product managers, so it's 
		often one dev vs. dba/sec/admin- department. Operations crews don't 
		want to learn new systems or introduce esoteric requirements only 
		after software is gold, and so on.
		For some reason, no one has problems when security or admins 
		say it will take 3 weeks for a badge or new hard drive, but expect 
		developers to rewrite software in a day. I often wonder if it's 
		just that the dev department never does a good job training their 
		manager compared to the other groups.
	
	
	IT turf war No. 2: Ops vs. dev
	
		One side of your IT department is laser-focused on keeping your 
		systems up and your costs down. The other side wants to push the 
		envelope until it bursts. Welcome to the war between your ops squad 
		and your dev team.
		"The classic conflict is that IT 
		is very often just managed as a cost center," says 
		Ted Shelton, CEO of
		Open-First, 
		a consultancy that helps Fortune 500 companies manage disruptive 
		technologies. "They believe their job is to figure out how to do 
		more with less. And when management is looking for places to cut 
		costs, IT is one of the first to get squeezed."
		... ... ... 
		But it's not all the fault of ops. The development side also 
		shoulders its portion of blame.
		"Let's start with the notion that app developers do not set out 
		to build network-friendly applications," says Steve Shalita, vice 
		president of marketing for
		
		NetScout Systems, which provides unified service delivery management 
		services. "These apps aren't optimized to enable the network to 
		run efficiently; they're built to do what they're supposed to do. 
		So the dev guys create the application, throw it over the wall for 
		the application implementation team to deploy it. The network guys 
		just provide a connection. Neither side is working together to tune 
		the app or optimize the environment."
		... ... ... 
	
	IT management vs. IT staff
		Most geeks wouldn't recognize a critical business process if 
		it bit them on the nose. And though their boss may have "technology" 
		or "information" in his job title, he appears to knows little about 
		either. This is perhaps the most intractable battle in all of IT 
		-- the war between the officer corps and the troops.
		"The biggest conflict is between IT management and IT staff," 
		says Pratt. "For some reason, the companies 
		I've worked for seem to hire or promote people who are not technologically 
		literate. It's like that person lost a bet or the 
		president of the company has a half-wit brother who needs a job. 
		You have the IT guys in the field saying, 'You really need to do 
		XYZ,' and the managers saying, 'We're not going to do that; it's 
		going to cost too much money.' They're constantly blocking things 
		that have to be done just because they can."
		... ... ...
		And keep your head low, to avoid getting hit by friendly fire.
	
	Selected Comments
	genemang :
	
		Working as a senior software engineer, I once asked a manager 
		during a review, if she had any programming experience or database 
		experience. Her answer was, "I've been around [sic] databases"...haa! 
		Lets face it, the corporate world is 
		putting this layer of idiot middle managers in the middle simply 
		to slave-drive the IT staff. Quite frankly, I found 
		myself CONSTANTLY having to educate this woman about technical decisions 
		that I should have been making in the first place. 
		I'm glad for it though...because 
		these large corporations can't get crap done. I left that corporate 
		hell-hole and did some freelance work and work for a start-up...TOTALLY 
		refreshing work! Thank you corporate America for 
		being so stupid as to hire this middle layer of idiots so as to 
		make under-capitalized startups competitive. Small companies don't 
		hire useless people. 
		It's so bad now that a lot of startups 
		are actually composed of people leaving corporations to get real 
		work done. It's becoming the new engine of innovation. 
		It's the new business pattern. 
		BUREACRACIES DON'T WORK. They only serve as fiefdoms for career-climbers 
		who don't add any value to the business equation. Business decisions 
		in corporate management center more now around securing power for 
		middle management and c-level fiefdoms than providing innovation 
		for the company. 
		For talented IT individuals....get out of corporate America, 
		you'll never regret it. 
	
If Wall Street proves anything, it's that competence and compensation 
are in no way related. So why IT should be different ? 
	
	Anonymous Coward: Job security 
	
		Assuming you can actually find a Software Engineering job that 
		will stay in the U.S., yeah, they're the "best."
	
	electrosoccertux: lol conflict of interest much?
	
		Do you think they, or monster.com, are going to publish a story 
		with more realistic salaries? They want more people using their 
		site for job searching. 
		I have a mathematician friend from a top tier university who 
		would be very interested to know that mathematicians make >$90k/yr. 
		Heh. He's not the lame-weirdo type mathematician either, fyi.
	
	Maltheus:
	
		The 132k figure is not for mid-level engineers (although maybe 
		it is in a big city). The actual quote from the article is "Most 
		earn a typical mid-level income of about $87,000 
		and top out at $132,000". Makes me feel a little better and it's 
		maybe the first time I RTFA in over a decade of visiting here.
	
	jmcbain: $132K is a bit low for top-tier engineers
	
		$132K as an upper bound sounds about right for mid-level engineers 
		but is a bit low as an upper bound for senior software engineers 
		at large corporations. Principal software 
		engineers at Microsoft are paid at around $160K with fairly huge 
		bonuses that push their yearly pay to nearly $200K. 
		
		Staff software engineers at Google and others are in the neighborhood. 
		Note that these are cream-of-the-crop 
		engineers who have chosen to stay as ICs rather than 
		go into management. Source: personal knowledge and glassdoor.com.
	
	Mean Variance: Stressful job, but not a bad one
	
		I have carried the title "Software Engineer" for 13 years. I'm 
		of mixed opinion about how great the job is. It pays pretty well, 
		but much of that is relative to what you're comparing to. 
		There are worse jobs out there, no doubt, but we're not just 
		coders at least in my experience and many people I know in Silicon 
		Valley. You have to read a lot of boring documents. You have to 
		know how to write. There are meetings. There are customers to talk 
		with. For me what makes it "not the greatest job in the world" is 
		that it's stressful in a way that people don't understand. 
		Deadlines always loom, and they are always too short. A good 
		SE has to constantly decide where to unit test, design, explain 
		to management, or just hack to get it done. There's no worse feeling 
		when management decides that a project is taking too long and asks 
		"who can we add to the project?" like we and our code is just plug-n-play 
		factory work. 
		That is stressful and few people understand the kind of stress 
		created on the job. I'm not asking for pity. It's a good gig overall, 
		but sometimes I wish I would have stuck with my original, lower 
		paying pursuit of teaching junior college mathematics.
	
In this sorry state of affairs, save for an occasional Dilbert cartoon, the world fails to acknowledge the trials and 
tribulations of the lone IT soldier.
   
	Spend a few minutes with an IT wonk, from the CIO down to the most 
	junior programmer, and you will find a common and unfortunate fault: 
	excessive whining. Your average IT worker can regale you with endless 
	tales of woe: from lack of funding and the evils of outsourcing, to 
	a dearth of acknowledgement for years of applying patches, caring for 
	backups and fending off hordes of hackers and crackers bent on ransacking 
	corporate infrastructure. In this sorry state of affairs, save for an 
	occasional Dilbert cartoon, the world fails to acknowledge the trials 
	and tribulations of the lone IT soldier.
	redux: 
	
		Your reply is a perfect example of the original point 
		That's "ALL" they have to do? Oh, brother, are you ever a perfect 
		example of an IT whiner. Lack of appreciation for the responsibilities 
		falling on others is a prime reason IT folks whine so much. I think 
		you are making Gray's point for him.
		It sounds like Cinnester works for a great company, so he just 
		may not understand, yet. 
	
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Softpanorama Recommended
[May 05, 2011]
Scripts OTN  by Prashant Pilankar (Infosys) Published on 
	
	Slashdot
Seven Sisters ;-)
Search engines:
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of Contents by Mark Burgess
Portals and collections of links
USAIL can be freely mirrored. A very useful resource...
 
Forums
Other E-books
LDP e-books
[Apr 21, 1999] Linux Administration Made Easy by Steve Frampton, 
<[email protected]> v0.99u.01 (PRE-RELEASE), 21 April 1999. A new LDP 
book.
The Network Administrators' Guide by Olaf Kirk
Society
Groupthink :
Two Party System 
as Polyarchy : 
Corruption of Regulators :
Bureaucracies :
Understanding Micromanagers 
and Control Freaks : Toxic Managers :  
Harvard Mafia :
Diplomatic Communication 
: Surviving a Bad Performance 
Review : Insufficient Retirement Funds as 
Immanent Problem of Neoliberal Regime : PseudoScience :
Who Rules America :
Neoliberalism
 : The Iron 
Law of Oligarchy : 
Libertarian Philosophy
Quotes
 
War and Peace 
: Skeptical 
Finance : John 
Kenneth Galbraith :Talleyrand :
Oscar Wilde :
Otto Von Bismarck :
Keynes :
George Carlin :
Skeptics :
Propaganda  : SE 
quotes : Language Design and Programming Quotes :
Random IT-related quotes : 
Somerset Maugham :
Marcus Aurelius :
Kurt Vonnegut :
Eric Hoffer :
Winston Churchill :
Napoleon Bonaparte :
Ambrose Bierce : 
Bernard Shaw : 
Mark Twain Quotes
Bulletin:
Vol 25, No.12 (December, 2013) Rational Fools vs. Efficient Crooks The efficient 
markets hypothesis :
Political Skeptic Bulletin, 2013 :
Unemployment Bulletin, 2010 :
 Vol 23, No.10 
(October, 2011) An observation about corporate security departments :
Slightly Skeptical Euromaydan Chronicles, June 2014 :
Greenspan legacy bulletin, 2008 :
Vol 25, No.10 (October, 2013) Cryptolocker Trojan 
(Win32/Crilock.A) :
Vol 25, No.08 (August, 2013) Cloud providers 
as intelligence collection hubs : 
Financial Humor Bulletin, 2010 :
Inequality Bulletin, 2009 :
Financial Humor Bulletin, 2008 :
Copyleft Problems 
Bulletin, 2004 :
Financial Humor Bulletin, 2011 :
Energy Bulletin, 2010 : 
Malware Protection Bulletin, 2010 : Vol 26, 
No.1 (January, 2013) Object-Oriented Cult :
Political Skeptic Bulletin, 2011 :
Vol 23, No.11 (November, 2011) Softpanorama classification 
of sysadmin horror stories : Vol 25, No.05 
(May, 2013) Corporate bullshit as a communication method  : 
Vol 25, No.06 (June, 2013) A Note on the Relationship of Brooks Law and Conway Law
History:
Fifty glorious years (1950-2000): 
the triumph of the US computer engineering :
Donald Knuth : TAoCP 
and its Influence of Computer Science : Richard Stallman 
: Linus Torvalds  :
Larry Wall  :
John K. Ousterhout : 
CTSS : Multix OS Unix 
History : Unix shell history :
VI editor :
History of pipes concept :
Solaris : MS DOS 
:  Programming Languages History :
PL/1 : Simula 67 :
C :
History of GCC development : 
Scripting Languages :
Perl history   :
OS History : Mail :
DNS : SSH 
: CPU Instruction Sets :
SPARC systems 1987-2006 :
Norton Commander :
Norton Utilities :
Norton Ghost :
Frontpage history :
Malware Defense History :
GNU Screen : 
OSS early history
Classic books:
The Peter 
Principle : Parkinson 
Law : 1984 :
The Mythical Man-Month : 
How to Solve It by George Polya :
The Art of Computer Programming :
The Elements of Programming Style :
The Unix Hater’s Handbook :
The Jargon file :
The True Believer :
Programming Pearls :
The Good Soldier Svejk : 
The Power Elite
Most popular humor pages:
Manifest of the Softpanorama IT Slacker Society :
Ten Commandments 
of the IT Slackers Society : Computer Humor Collection 
: BSD Logo Story :
The Cuckoo's Egg :
IT Slang : C++ Humor 
: ARE YOU A BBS ADDICT? :
The Perl Purity Test :
Object oriented programmers of all nations 
: Financial Humor :
Financial Humor Bulletin, 
2008 : Financial 
Humor Bulletin, 2010 : The Most Comprehensive Collection of Editor-related 
Humor : Programming Language Humor :
Goldman Sachs related humor :
Greenspan humor : C Humor :
Scripting Humor :
Real Programmers Humor :
Web Humor : GPL-related Humor 
: OFM Humor :
Politically Incorrect Humor :
IDS Humor : 
"Linux Sucks" Humor : Russian 
Musical Humor : Best Russian Programmer 
Humor : Microsoft plans to buy Catholic Church 
: Richard Stallman Related Humor :
Admin Humor : Perl-related 
Humor : Linus Torvalds Related 
humor : PseudoScience Related Humor :
Networking Humor :
Shell Humor :
Financial Humor Bulletin, 
2011 : Financial 
Humor Bulletin, 2012 :
Financial Humor Bulletin, 
2013 : Java Humor : Software 
Engineering Humor : Sun Solaris Related Humor :
Education Humor : IBM 
Humor : Assembler-related Humor :
VIM Humor : Computer 
Viruses Humor : Bright tomorrow is rescheduled 
to a day after tomorrow : Classic Computer 
Humor 
The Last but not Least  Technology is dominated by 
two types of people: those who understand what they do not manage and those who manage what they do not understand ~Archibald Putt. 
Ph.D
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Last updated: 
June 03, 2021