@davidgerard

Too generic.

If you don't get really annoyed at some point doing computer - you aren't doing it right. Gotta lean in and get really annoyed. The annoyed is where the interesting bits happen.

As for magic, I defer to the words of the master:

"Sometimes, magic is just someone spending more time on something than anyone else might reasonably expect."
-- Teller

@davidgerard I still think about my onboarding to an Identity/Directory engineer job about 15 years ago when the team lead excitedly asked me "what [my] home lab is set up like."

The answer that I do this for *work*, I do not think it is *fun*, or a *hobby*, and I will never in my life troubleshoot an #ActiveDirectory problem unless I am getting paid for it, was not what he expected.

#SysAdmin#DatacenterLife

@andthisismrspeacock @davidgerard At one point, my company demanded that remote workers set up and maintain separate wifi networks for our work computers. I told them that they paid me to maintain the corporate systems, and that if they wanted to pay me to do the same with my home network, then I'd be doing it during work hours. The requests mysteriously went away.
@davidgerard @andthisismrspeacock Network segregation. This was after the LastPass hack where a DevOps engineer's personal laptop was hacked and the attacker pivoted to the work laptop. What my execs missed in that whole thing was that the original service that the attacker got was a publicly exposed Plex server, and that the engineer was using their personal device for work.