andrewducker (
andrewducker) wrote2002-01-10 10:01 am
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Beyond the Valley of Sleep
Monday night: Was about to turn off the computer at 11pm when I got frantic email from nICk because Outlook Express had crashed and lost all of his email. Fortunately this is a problem I know of, so I could retrieve it all for him. Still, finally crashed out at half past midnight. Had to be up at 6am to get a train to Glasgow (due to train strike).
Tuesday night: got home at a half reasonable hour (10:30) and was actually in bed by 11:15, leading to feeling almost human on Wednesday.
Wednesday night: Mulholland drive started later and lasted longer than expected, got home from Glasgow at 12:30, went to bed by 1am, phoned by GF at 1:05, managed sleep by 1:30. Alarm went off this morning at 7:00 and I was sooo close to just going back to sleep. Tonight I have no plans except "get to bed early and be snoring by 11pm"
If only my eyes will stay open until then...
Tuesday night: got home at a half reasonable hour (10:30) and was actually in bed by 11:15, leading to feeling almost human on Wednesday.
Wednesday night: Mulholland drive started later and lasted longer than expected, got home from Glasgow at 12:30, went to bed by 1am, phoned by GF at 1:05, managed sleep by 1:30. Alarm went off this morning at 7:00 and I was sooo close to just going back to sleep. Tonight I have no plans except "get to bed early and be snoring by 11pm"
If only my eyes will stay open until then...
Re: Invaluable
I work as 'Distributed Production Operator' for a Very Large Insurance and Finanacial Company. Technically, I'm Unix Production Support. In actuality, I watch the Big Red Board and when the BRB lights up, I call someone and haul them out of bed in the middle of the night. It's actually quite theraputic, and appeals nicely to my inner Bastard.
Win2K, huh? Haven't touched it myself -- we use NT4.0 at work and I use Mac OS X at home -- but good luck with it.
And now, I get to go home! wheee, one-day work weeks. I [heart] managers who will let you use vacation time to play video games.
Monitoring
My brother works at the Royal Bank of Scotland in a similar position to yours. Technically he works in support. In actuality he takes incoming calls, phones the right person and then says "Sort it!" He finds it pretty dull most of the time, but passes the time by working on web pages and gaming background.
I find Win2K (and WinXP) a lot nicer than NT to use, but you really do need enough memory. I'd recommend 256MB, but as that's only ?45, it's not really a problem. I haven't used OSX, but I've heard good things about it. Is it really that user friendly?
Re: Monitoring
OS X is wonderful. It's easily the most user-friendly Unix GUI I've ever touched. I don't know how it would work for novice users, as I haven't been one of those for a /very long time/, but it's managed to get Unix on the desktop in a way that Linux has only been dreaming of. And it's got the Unix rock-solid stability -- go and take a look at kekkai.org. That's my desktop machine serving you that page. Right now, it's also running Photoshop, Premiere, iTunes (MP3 player), and three different web browsers. The webserver doesn't even hiccup. And all of that on only 384MB of RAM.
Looking for stability in all the right places
I'd love to run my own webserver, but I really don't have the money, unfortunately. Here in the UK broadband is still heinously expensive, especially if you actually want to run a server.
I'd also do more writing at work, but I can't listen to music either, due to running support and having to listen for the phone. In my last job I coded all the time (well, mostly) and thus had my headphones pretty much attached to my skull - made life a lot happier.