Archive for April, 2007

15 Minute Movie Review: Happy Feet

April 28, 2007

It’s not that it took me 15 minutes to write this or that it will take you 15 minutes to read it, it’s that I turned this movie off after 15 minutes.  My wife and I couldn’t take anymore of it.

Let’s backtrack a little bit first though.  Ever since this movie had been in theatres, I had heard from people how great it was.  Now with any movie or piece of entertainment, I take reviews with a grain of salt.  Especially for movies that I have absolutely no interest in seeing.  However, there were rave reviews coming in from people whose opinions I respect and trust.  So last night I received the DVD from Netflix and my wife and I sat down and began to watch it.  It was terrible.

A few weeks ago my wife and I watched Flushed Away and we were surprised at how much we enjoyed it.  Not because we dislike cartoons or animated films (I love cartoons) but because it just seemed like a story and setting that wouldn’t hold our interest.  Happy Feet was the same.  However, the difference being that we couldn’t get past the first 15 minutes.

It was probably a combination of factors.  First, there was seeing Robin Williams’ name in the credits, not for one character but two.  Then there was the ruining of a couple of perfectly good songs (Prince’s Kiss and one other one that Pink was signing).  The last straw though was probably the foreshadowing of what I’m sure was going to be the Outcast Plot (the baby penguin has “Happy Feet” to which he is told “don’t do that, it’s not penguin”.  Then he can’t hold a tune and the Penguin Elders look upon him with shame.  Because for some reason penguins all sing).  I looked at my wife and said, “Well, I’ve had enough.”  To which she replied, “Thank God.”

The evening wasn’t a complete waste though.  We had Tivoed this week’s Heroes, The Office and 30 Rock so we watched those and had a better time with them then we probably would’ve had with Happy Feet.

Pointless Waste of IT Time: PCs for Children

April 25, 2007

At each one of our remote locations, there is an area that essentially is day care center. Currently the setup is similar to one of those kids areas that you see at McDonalds with a jungle gym area, but also with a few TVs and video games and a larger area.

The Operations Manager calls me into his office and discusses his plans for these day care areas. Right now, about half of the day care areas have a PC setup to check the kids in and to insure that their parents are actually paying for the service. He wanted to make sure that we had a roll out schedule for the rest of the branches. I told him that it shouldn’t be a problem and that we’ll get the PCs ordered.

Then he says: “Oh yeah, and I also want computers in each day care area for the children to use. How long will that take?”

Well considering I really had no idea what he was talking about and felt blind sided by this request, I asked, “Um, well what do you mean you want the children to use them? What would they be using it for?”

He proceeded to explain to me that one of the competitors has a setup where they have computers setup so that the kids can do their homework, play with some learning programs and similar software. They had those terminals set up instead of the video game kiosks that we have. I asked if we would be doing away with the video games. He said no, we’d be keeping those. I asked, “Well, do you think the kids are going to want to learn, or would they rather play video games?” He said that they were mostly there for the parents’ benefit and that we was sure the kids wouldn’t use them much. I asked why should we implement them if the parents are already paying for the service?

Of course, this was an argument that was doomed from the start. So now, in addition to the full month that I already have, I also have to research children’s learning programs. So in conclusion we’ll be paying thousands of dollars just to match up with the competition and deploy around 30 computers that will probably rarely be used. The IT Department loses again!

RPC over HTTP on Exchange 2003 – A Lesson

April 24, 2007

The past two days I had to undergo what I believed to be a fairly simple task: Setting up our Exchange 2003 Server for RPC over HTTP. This was basically because we have a few people complaining that hey have to use Outlook Web Access instead of the Outlook client when they are at home or, those working at a remote location. The remote locations are set up with VPN connections, but it’s really too slow to have Outlook setup at each PC.

This wasn’t necessarily my decision to implement this. I see the benefits and I don’t have a VPN connection at home, so I wouldn’t mind using it but I don’t exactly have a pattern of making more work for myself when I have enough already. Rather, this decision was made by management after receiving these complaints from their underlings at the branches:

Complaint: I don’t have email at my PC.

The Truth: They don’t have the Outlook client setup at their PC. They do have email by means of Outlook Web Access. Adding to the irony, this particular complaint was sent in an email.

Complaint: I can’t put those items that you wanted on my Task List because I don’t have Outlook.

The Truth: Task lists are accessible in Outlook Web Access. It’s right there underneath the Inbox. Right in front of you.

Complaint: I wasn’t able to get that email to you right away because I don’t have Outlook. Outlook Web Access doesn’t get email right away.

The Truth: Give me a break, now you’re just reaching for excuses to not have to work. There’s even a little pop up box when you get a new email. It’s fast enough for your personal email.

But I digress. So anyway, yesterday I blocked off a few hours to implement this. I understood the concept and what was necessary and so I thought that by freeing up two hours, I was being more than generous.

I just finished it right now. One day and 3 hours later.

There is absolutely no reason why it shouldn’t have taken that long. There was a nice lesson learned though, and I’ll share it with you now:

READ EVERYTHING

I had everything setup within 30 minutes. However, I spent almost a day and a half troubleshooting why it wasn’t working. Finally, after reading and re-reading the same 15 articles/columns/websites, my eyes settled on something I had previously skipped over: When connecting from outside the domain – you have to import the SSL certificate. Every article pretty much stated the same thing. However, I skipped over it every time because it was always in the middle of a paragraph that started talking about how you needed a SSL certificate for your Exchange server. I thought, “Well I don’t need to read this, we already have one”. As soon as I imported the certificate everything started working like magic. Magic that took too long and gave me a migraine in the process. Lesson learned.

Happy IT Manager: Guitar Hero 2

April 23, 2007

So everyone once and a while, there are things that come along and take away the rage and fury that come from being in the IT field. One of those things is a video game franchise that has been given to us by God himself, Guitar Hero.

At the end of 2005, the first Guitar Hero came out for the PS2 and within the Angry IT Manager household there was much rocking. Being that I’m a huge fan of most of the music that is featured and the fact that I, like a number of devil-horn-raising rock enthusiasts, have long played air guitar while at home, driving in the car or walking down a busy street… well it was a match made in heaven. Many hours were spent mastering every song on the tracklist and eventually the entire game was completed on every difficulty level. However, the feeling that I had to constantly increase my score on each song pretty much made me pick it up obsessively on a regular basis. Until Guitar Hero 2 was released for the PS2.

The day Guitar Hero 2 came out, I went to Circuit City on my lunch and picked it up (because Circuit City was giving a free GH2 beanie with purchase and I’m a dork like that). In a lapse of judgment, I decided to also take it home and just try a few songs. Three hours later I decided that it would probably be in my best interest to go back to work and hope that nobody noticed that I had gone AWOL. Thankfully it was a slow day and was office door is usually closed, so no one had.

I’m a firm believer that for me, Guitar Hero is probably the perfect video game. Music is a large part of my life and I’m somewhat of a rock aficionado so playing Guitar Hero always puts me in a good mood. Sure there’s frustration (it took me a solid month to beat Bark At The Moon, the final song on the first Guitar Hero, on Expert) but that is surpassed by the feeling of joy and accomplishment that comes from not only beating that hard song you’ve been working on, but nailing some of the faster solos.

A typical day for me involves the following:

1) “Waking up” in the morning and stumbling around until I get my caffeine fix

2) A full day of work that involves lots of gritted teeth, remarks under my breath and random screaming and throwing things. Also, headaches.

3) Coming home, working out for a bit to work out a little frustration.

4) Playing Guitar Hero and working out the rest.

A few weeks ago I picked up Guitar Hero and a XBox 360. With the online leaderboards and achievement points, my addiction has increased and my obsessive compulsive tendencies have been working on overdrive. Please though Activision, no My Chemical Romance for GH3.

Mail Snooping = More Fun

April 20, 2007

We recently received the go ahead to order some mail snooping software for our company. Management has decided that personal email may be a large problem (it is) and damaging to productivity. So, they want surveillance software attached to our Exchange server to prov this. Never mind that they already know that it’s a problem and that all they have to do is tighten the screws on their middle and lower management to curb it. Hell, I even said we can block outgoing and incoming emails outside of our domain. In fact, even though the belief is that everyone within the organization needs an email address, the fact of the matter is that only a few actually do. There seems to be an easier, cheaper solution than spending thousands of dollars on an email surveillance system. Oh well, let’s just go ahead and throw money at the problem instead of trying the other solutions first. Never mind the fact that most of the people involved in approving projects and expenses as well as making the important decisions in the company are also the biggest offenders.

I’m not complaining too much though, it will almost certainly mean more fun for me. Let’s be honest, when you are the one spying on others – it can be pretty fun. Having a web filter has certainly taught me that. So even though it’s a hassle to set it up, and I’d rather the money be spent on a company car for the department since I’m on the road constantly, I’ll take what I can get. Coming Soon: Mail Surveillance Drinking Game.

(Yes, it has been a while since the last post and yes this is a low key way of resuming posting, but let’s just choose to ignore that shall we?)