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Revisiting dirty jobs in IT…

I’ve found some answers to the question I posed earlier, what are IT’s dirtiest jobs?

Jason Hiner over at techrepublic.com (registration required, I believe) just started a thread asking, What are the worst jobs in IT? accompanied by the counter question, What are the best jobs in IT?

Great question, one I’ve asked here before in my IT Dirty Jobs post. And now I get some answers! Here are my three favorites.
How about computer technician for elementary, middle school, and high school computer labs, yikes. I envision virus infestations and germy keyboards (of course, studies have shown that keyboards are filthier than most toilets. Ew.) Not to mention the script kiddies who fancy themselves as hackers in the older grades.

I also liked the job description for an industrial machinery debugger and programmer. The loud, hot or cold (depending on the time of year) factory floor is your workstation, and apparently you have to climb over the broken machinery, risking life and limb! Risky, dirty, and high pressure all in one.
And the final one I’ll mention because it gets a lot of votes is “sole IT person,” meaning if it gets plugged in, you’re the one in charge of it company-wide. Yeah, that has to be a dirty job. Crawling under desks, driving to remote sites only to find out the problem is fixed before you get there, and the pressure under emergency situations (all eyes are on you until the network is up). Sounds down and dirty to me.
Other finalists include: ISP tech support, network cable installer, help desk, cooling fan hairball remover (okay, actually, computer refurbisher, blech).
So there you have it, a report on some downright dirty jobs.


Posted on : Dec 22 2005
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Posted under talk.bmc |

Taking a two week break, pondering structured blogging

I’m off for a two week break and I’ll blog when I return. In the meantime, I’m reading about structured blogging.

I’ll be off next week for the holidays. The first week of January I’ll be welcoming a new niece or nephew to the extended family. Nope, they haven’t learned the gender, but we haven’t broken into the store where they’ve registered to find out, either.
Until January, I’ll share a post about structured blogging that I found in Charlie Wood’s blog about RSS in the enterprise, Moonwatcher. I’m contemplating an insightful post by Joshua Porter, ” Structured blogging, who is benefitting and how” and also learning more about the semantic web. I’m working on a DITA specialization for blog entries and I need to find out what elements the structured blogging folks will require. I’d like more practice in structured authoring using DITA, and since I’m writing two blog posts a week, seems like it’s the perfect opportunity to put get some structured authoring practice.
Happy holidays, everyone!


Posted on : Dec 22 2005
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Posted under talk.bmc |