Krarl
ClioSport Club Member
I'll be getting rid of a lot of server hardware soon if anyone needs anything?
Dealing with MS
https://techcommunity.microsoft.com...-to-microsoft-365-office-365-and/ba-p/4100985
365 licencing was already a s**t show before this
This site is a saviour for it.Microsoft 365 Licensing
A collection of Microsoft 365 licensing diagrams to view in browser or download as PDF, PNG, SVG, and Visio files.m365maps.com
I've learnt to work on the basis of sub 300 you get business premium, over 300 E3.
At least it's less confusing than the on-prem licencing
Wow what a surprise that on prem is cheaper, who'd have thought🤔🤦🏻♂️🤣Heres the thing, MS Exchange will never go back on premise. Fact.
However, infrastructure and servers will go back on prem / colo again.
After beancounters realise its a wild west for virtual "cloud" offerings.
It really shouldn't come as a surprise that they lure you in then just ramp up costs because they know lots cba to migrate off.Wow what a surprise that on prem is cheaper, who'd have thought🤔🤦🏻♂️🤣
Anyone that thinks AWS is better for a full platform is a f**king idiot. They get you in with cheap offerings and scalability, then 2 years down the line when you're settled they absolutely hammer your arse until it's bleeding
Essentially yes, 50GB to 100GB.Yeah its a good site mate. Only real difference between MS E3 and Biz premium is the mailbox sizes from memory.
Their naming conventions are diabolical. for example, Microsoft E3 or 365 E3 (very different licences).
Don't get me started on Teams voice licencing!
Essentially yes, 50GB to 100GB.
Speaking of this, if anyone does need MS licensing and its a small/medium company or yourself. Happy to help on that.
We're hoping that AWS annihilating people for prices will help us with Colo customers. I've currently got over 100 racks sat empty and more to come with further brand/platform consolidationsIt really shouldn't come as a surprise that they lure you in then just ramp up costs because they know lots cba to migrate off.
Our client is having to do a lot of work because of AWS' new public IP pricing, I think they have something like 14,000 public IPs in use so that is both a huge cost and a huge bit of work to reduce.
Our colo offering has been doing well from those who read one article about someone getting hacked on AWS so that's on good thing.
Who you working for now fam?We're hoping that AWS annihilating people for prices will help us with Colo customers. I've currently got over 100 racks sat empty and more to come with further brand/platform consolidations
By the end of the year I should be able to free up a further 52 racks minimum (hopefully). It used to scare me under GoDaddy to have so many racks in whitespace, now we've been bought out I'm a lot more forgiving and we want to fill them opposed to letting them sit empty
Gridjet DatacentresWho you working for now fam?
Where's the colo again?
I think its going to take another route yet.Heres the thing, MS Exchange will never go back on premise. Fact.
However, infrastructure and servers will go back on prem / colo again.
After beancounters realise its a wild west for virtual "cloud" offerings.
Saw a 25% uplift on one account.then 2 years down the line when you're settled they absolutely hammer your arse until it's bleeding
But my essential cheque processing server is now offline.Saw a 25% uplift on one account.
"We didnt budget for that"
Start --> Powershell --> Stop-computer -force
Need to remember M365 and O365 are different.Works out cheaper to have biz premium and bang on exchange plan 2 🤌🏽
Need to remember M365 and O365 are different.
M365 comes with Windows licence now.
These are yearly prices, note cheaper than MS
Bus Prem = £200 & EX P2 = £72 - Total: £272
In-Place Archive, 100 GB mailbox and messages up to 150 MB, Cloud Voicemail services with call answering, dial-in UI, and automated attendant
Up to 300 users
E3 - £370
Office 365 E3, Enterprise Mobility + Security E3, and Windows 10/11 Enterprise E3. This per-user licensed suite of products offers users best-in-class productivity across devices while providing IT security and control.
Easy saving on that.
However up to 300 users swings people and they have to move.
I swear we work at the same place.But my essential cheque processing server is now offline.
True story....
Very possible.I swear we work at the same place.
I bet a whole british pound it was "encoded" in Excel and had a smattering of VBA from Dave that left in 2003.
Always great to hear that people like this do sometimes get what they're due.I'm not sure how funny it is, but this was so sweet.
I work in support, but a few of my jobs have also involved some toolset coding or bug fixing. I was looking at a major issue for a customer and writing a fix for the problem. They'd changed something upstream which "shouldn't have any impact" but..... yeah.......... we all know how that goes. This was an overnight run problem, so as long as it was fixed within the next working day we'd be all good.
We got a C-level management escalation out of the blue. Some tiny peen MBA drone middle manager had decided we all needed to get on a call right now and was very upset indeed that his authority was not being respected.
So we join this call and it's full of the great and the good, senior management from both my company and their company, and this total throbber is shouting the odds about why it isn't fixed yet, why are support dealing with it and not an experienced developer, why hasn't it been escalated, why did it happen and why was he told he couldn't have a call. Absolute classic clueless ranty escalation.
After about fifteen minutes of this, I was able to calmly point out:
The problem is because they made a change in their upstream system without telling us.
We were happy to have a call, but their team made the choice to let me crack on with fixing the problem instead.
We acknowledged their escalation request, and explained to them that no-one knows this code as well as I do and there is no-one better than me to fix it.
I know how to fix it and just need a little more time to finish the coding.
All of this was documented and agreed on the support ticket.
Could have heard a pin drop.
Then their CTO just very calmly said "Thank you for the update. I think we should let you go and finish the fix and we should make sure everyone on our side has read the ticket in future."
It was simply beautiful.
Some of our IAM policies might as well have been written by the Saxons they make so little sense. You know it’s going well when there’s an allow and a deny for the same resource in one policy.i feel like i'm losing braincells today, i forget some of the younger generation have never worked with On-prem security permissions
View attachment 1689797
Naming a Security group totally sets the permissions to deny 🤦♂️
"I named the group Deny so they know they don't have access to the folder" 🤦♂️
I dont like pictures of boobs. Any size, any shape ...Had another belter yesterday.
Turns out that I have a 3rd line engineer who can’t stand pictures of fish. Our head of infra told us this info, none of us believed him, so when he was on a teams call we kept sending pictures of trout, salmon and basically any other fish from Google.
He threw up in the office.
Turns out, he actually doesn't like pictures of Fish
De rien!I dropped in here, just saw everyone was speaking in French.
So I’ll be off again. Tutty bye, thanks for having me 👍
If you wanna share his email with us we’ll happily sign him up for Fishmongers Weekly and other reputable newslettersHad another belter yesterday.
Turns out that I have a 3rd line engineer who can’t stand pictures of fish. Our head of infra told us this info, none of us believed him, so when he was on a teams call we kept sending pictures of trout, salmon and basically any other fish from Google.
He threw up in the office.
Turns out, he actually doesn't like pictures of Fish