If you can read this, thank your sysadmin

Today is Appreciation Day

You may ask “What is a ?”

The answers you will find at http://www.sysadminday.com/ are as good as any. Being a is a somewhat and turns you into a cynic very quickly (see http://www.sysadminday.com/time.html ) and you start hanging out in places like the scary devil monastery. Your (l)users also stop talking to you mainly out of fear of hearing the truth because the last time they complained about not getting e- you answered “Well, maybe nobody likes you anymore”

Why does one stay a then if the stress is so much. You will find the answer in the scary devil monastery FAQ

Sysadmins are driven by a desire to _make_it_work_. We loathe non-functioning
pieces of crap. Similarly, we hate seeing equipment working at substantially
below its potential due to moronic admin decisions.

Doesn’t this mean we should shun sysadminning, then? Well, as you will
see from discussion in , we have this tendency to drift into the job.
It starts when you’re given a machine on your desk which crashes every
five minutes, and you know how to make it only once every five days.
You get given the root/administrator password. You end up fixing someone
else’s machine too. As word gets out, you have more and more people
calling on you for basic administration assistance every week.
Eventually you get told that your is more important than
what you were doing before. Since you seem to be the only person in your
company who is doing any , you have to agree.

After a while, you quit and go to for somewhere else, where you’re
promised you won’t have to be a .
But the machine on your desk crashes every five minutes…

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