Reddit SystemAdmin. Thanks @reddit2telegram and @r_channels.
Just Curious, is it normal to have access to everything?
Started a job about a month ago as my second ever IT job. The first one I had was classic HellDesk, pretty much a body just to block calls, doing about as much IT support as the user themselves could do. I got a offer from a relatively small local MSP, >50 employees. This place is... different. Right now I'm working "Dispatch" essentially the first line for calls, fixing whatever I can in 40 minutes or less, and if it's harder than that, escalate to the tier 2's. The only thing is, I have access to... everything. We have about 50 companies as clients, some including hospitals with hundreds of employees, and I can access everything. I have free reign to fuck with switches, routers, firewalls, domain admin passwords, rmms to run stuff at system level if needed, all automations. Literally everything we manage for all of our clients has credentials posted inside of our documentation somewhere. Every type of server we manage for them, exchange/365 admin access, access through a couple different RMMs with automation possibilities if I need to automate stuff at the system level, literally everything from top to bottom, I have access to it, and I'm at the very bottom of our totem pole here. Is this normal? I'm learning tons of stuff every day, so it's the best to come into as a new guy, but man it feels like the wild west. Is this just how small msps are?
https://redd.it/1mekqva
@r_systemadmin
I think I messed up today at work
So, today was going to be a normal morning, everything was going fine and well. I work for a ERP software that uses Delphi and ODBC interface to connect to SQL Server instances. I have this customer which he has this server that wanted to switch his old HDD to a new one that he had, because the previous was pretty slow. He installed a clean Windows Server install on this "new" HDD and here we go:
I connected to his server and started restoring the application database like normally. note: this was my first time doing such a big task outside of my usual ERP troubleshooting problems.
I managed to configure everything in a 2 hour time, to the point where it was before. I could connect to the SQL Server locally and everything, but then on other machines at the local network the ODBC couldn't, for some reason. I checked everything you could imagine, to firewall ranging up to the database properties itself, here we go another hour of downtime, the man starts sending angry messages due to the downtime. Even with a clean Windows 2022 server install, the server station was still sluggish.
In the end, so he would calm down, I advised him to swap over to the old HDD with the previous Windows install from yesterday so he could keep on working, even with such a slow HDD.
This is my first time doing such a task at my job with roughly 6 month experience, I'm hired as a Jr Tech Support or LVL1 Support as they call it here. It's my first IT job, also.
Could I have done any better?
https://redd.it/1me5k3p
@r_systemadmin
The reality of Imposter Syndrome
Like most you, my fellow Fix Its, imposter syndrome runs rampant through my veins. But what keeps it at bay is the constant ask for a " can you jump in this meeting" or a "quick chat". I am annoyed, but it definitely is good to know that other techs look to you for answers. Today was a rough day. I'm dead tired. It's 330pm and I'm having lunch. I get to see my wife and daughter soon, so that shutdown button is getting ready to be fingered (I laugh hardest at my own jokes). Good job everyone!
https://redd.it/1mebq9i
@r_systemadmin
Sleep Apnea and Sysadmin
Just got diagnosed with severe sleep apnea (not weight related).
Apparently, this is more common than I was aware of.
Noticed I was tired all the time and leaning more and more on stimulants (ADHD meds and caffeine). Getting older of course doesn't help, but apparently it’s more than that.
Curious if you folks have experienced the same thing?
Waiting for my APAP to hopefully solve this and get me back to my A-game.
I'm a bit anxious about using one (some people take to it immediately and others need to work into it), but need to get my mind back in the game.
If you do use one, did it take you a while to get use to it?
https://redd.it/1me20q0
@r_systemadmin
Fresh Service Down?
Is fresh service down for anyone else right now?
EDIT: It's back up for us now. About an hour of outage
https://redd.it/1me1o2f
@r_systemadmin
A DC just tapped out mid-update because someone thought 4GB RAM and a pagefile on D:\ with MaxSize=0 was a good idea.
So today, one of our beloved domain controller decided to nosedive during Windows Update.
A collegue informed me about it because he noticed that a backup plan stopped working for this server.
I log in to investigate and am greeted by this gem:
>The paging file is too small for this operation to complete.
Huh.
Open Event Viewer - Event ID 2004 - Resource Exhaustion Detector shouting into the void. Turns out:
MsSense.exe: 12.7GB
MsMpEng.exe: 3.3GB
updater.exe: 1.6GB
Total: roughly more than three times what the box even had.
Cool cool. So how much RAM does this DC have?
4GB. FOUR. On a domain controller. Running Defender for Endpoint.
Just when I think "surely the pagefile saved it," I run:Get-WmiObject -Class Win32_PageFileSetting
And there it is:
MaximumSize : 0
Name : D:\pagefile.sys
ZERO.
Zero kilobytes of coping mechanism. On D:.
Which isn’t even the system volume.
It's like giving someone a thimble of water and telling them to run a marathon in July.
Anyway, i rebooted it out of pure spite. It came back. Somehow.
Meanwhile i've created a task for the datacenter responsibles like:
>Can we please stop bullshitting and start fixing our base configs?
https://redd.it/1me29wa
@r_systemadmin
Microsoft's AI risk list left out cybersecurity. Are we actually safe or just ignored?
Been working in this field, and I keep seeing posts about AI taking over everything from copywriting to coding to customer support.
But in my day to day, I don’t see how it replaces a lot of what we do. You still need human eyes for context, forensics, incident response, and even just spotting weird behavior that tools miss in cybersecurity.
Sure AI helps with alert triage or writing detection rules faster, but it feels more like an assistant than a replacement.
could just be me, but cyber still feels pretty human. Am I missing something or is it really not that easy to replace us?
https://redd.it/1mdwaxo
@r_systemadmin
Silent deployment of employee monitoring for hundreds of remote PCs?
I'm really wrestling with a directive from HR. They want to implement employee monitoring software for our hundreds of remote employees. The biggest headache is doing this without a massive backlash. I'm thinking about solutions that allow for silent, automated install. It's not only solid activity monitoring software and app and website tracking we need but also something easy to manage at scale for remote team management. Any thoughts on how to pull this off without causing a panic? Or pitfalls to avoid for workforce analytics at this scale? Thanks.
https://redd.it/1mdshqp
@r_systemadmin
Everything I do feels utterly pointless. So much paperwork. It's a total waste of time. It pays my bills, but I hate it.
I'm so, so burnt out.
Every little thin annoys me and feels inefficient and unnecessary.
For example, I have to fill out daily timesheets with a breakdown about how I spent my work day, not once - but TWICE, one on a system meant for payroll people, and the other for our managers. They are very different and I can't copy stuff from one system to another easily.
I have to enter the same 18 new DNS records on Azure, AWS and internal ActiveDirectory, because this specific department is worried about a doomsday scenario in which both clouds completely go down and their DNS would be affected. It's absurd, each cloud gives you like 4 nameservers in different locations already.
Every time I have to update a minor thing on some software, I have to put in a "change management request" form with 86 different fields to fill out, with pointless information. Every field requires selecting some menu option that takes 30 seconds to load, and is seldom ever relevant (for example, I have to enter the name of the data centre - despite the fact we don't have data centres anymore. So I just choose a random one to proceed). Then I have to chase up approvals for this request, from at least 5 different teams. Most of them aren't technical and have no idea what I'm doing, it's a rubberstamp at best. But it adds a lot of overhead and Slack messages, to what would have otherwise been a 5 min task.
I had some project manager asking me to check for the sizes of their software's directories on multiple servers. Same software, diff servers. Took quite a while. I still have no idea what that data was for, and I get the feeling that neither did he.
I used to get these daily tasks from one of our department, automated-looking requests to give some new recruits access to something. Every time someone joined I had to spend time on granting them access. I got suspicious - why am I even doing this, this person doesn't have a technical role so why would he need admin privileges on a linux machine. I started marking these tickets as completed and closing them, without actually doing anything. It's been 4 months and nobody had noticed yet. I wonder what percentage of the work I do produces nothing that's used by anyone, like this.
***
I'm in a public sector role. So working harder/more doesn't really reward you with anything. Everyone gets paid the same. No performance bonuses. I get the feeling everyone else here isn't working too hard, and is pushing back against a lot of stuff, which is why these people always get to me somehow. There are also a lot of people around who just aren't very good at their job or knowledgeable.
Some of my friends are like "why don't you automate the boring stuff". I'm not a dev and usually don't have access to APIs, and the bureaucratic obstacles to get that are impossible here. I'm tired. I don't even want to see a keyboard. I mostly want to be outside and lie down on the grass.
I'm less than decade away from early retirement, based on my calculations. So all I can do is rant. Not changing into other fields or roles or companies. I'm done. I'm cooked.
https://redd.it/1mdrl14
@r_systemadmin
Why I like working for a large enterprise
In the past there has been back and forth about this with people in smaller shops having one opinion and people in the large shops having another, and we definitely have our share of issues in the large enterprise, but I can say we do not have the following problems I see popping up here all the time.
Secretary storing stuff in the network closed?
Nope. Only authorized IT contacts have keys and policy forbids storage in network closets.
Boss demands to have a list of everyone's passwords.
Nope. Nobody can have anyone else's password by policy. Doing so would result in termination. No boss can override this
Random desktop on a shelf in the data center
Nope. Desktop computers are not allowed in the data center. Period.
25 year old desktop with NT4 running the voicemail system in a closet
Nope. This would be a massive violation of the information security policy.
Boss doesn't like MFA and forces you to turn it off for his account
Nope. Information security policy requires everyone have MFA no matter who they are.
A manager wants access to a former employee's email account and then starts sending email as them for months on end
Nope. If an employee leaves it requires multiple approvals including HR to get access to their email account, and only for long enough to copy the mail out and then it is closed down again. Old accounts can not be kept open indefinitely. Business process needs to be built around this because when people leave their accounts are absolutely deleted after a grace period.
The finance lady insists she must have her own personal printer and the boss says to give it to her
Nope. There is no "finance lady" because finance is an entire department staffed by employees who have to operate as employees like everyone else and use the same equipment as everyone else. They can use secure release on the same printers as everyone else.
It isn't all sunshine and roses by any means but we don't do a bunch of stupid nonsense that is just blatantly awful. There are no hubs under desks and servers in the bathroom. The microwave is not an IT responsibility. IT does not assemble furniture. We have a standard replacement cycle for our laptops every 3-4 years. Nobody has a gaming PC on their desk because they think they're special. Random non-technical executives do not have domain admin access just because they want it.
We have a whole host of other issues, but at least we have none of these problems.
https://redd.it/1mdqf01
@r_systemadmin
How good are you at programming, not scripting?
I was just wondering whether you think that SysAdmins can be decent programmers. For example, in addition to scripting, I write small helper programs like mailers and backups(and some not so small that use SQL databases) in C# and Assembler, as well as some SQL. And some web programming, when edits are needed.
https://redd.it/1mdl62k
@r_systemadmin
Palo Alto buying CyberArk out: An Exciting New Chapter for CyberArk and Our Customers
https://www.cyberark.com/press/palo-alto-networks-announces-agreement-to-acquire-cyberark/?mkt\_tok=MzE2LUNaUC0yNzUAAAGb-3uDVtY7tl2Ujk2K\_iqf7QROCXXzw6n8wWpGZYe32J3ojjq6X2AH\_Q1NrwrrP3b-DN6i8sMPW1EhGdPrM9vk7r82k9USDlsw6rHAfQoHmaYuCiXSrw
I feel sorry for my old workplace who is facing a budget crunch without having to deal with this.
https://redd.it/1mdimqv
@r_systemadmin
Virtualbox Extension Pack license terms quietly tweaked, says licensing consultant
Larry needs another yacht:
https://www.theregister.com/2025/07/30/licensing_change_oracle_virtualbox/
https://redd.it/1mddlpx
@r_systemadmin
Using Old Firewalls with Custom Firmware
Hi,
Today we cleaned out our storage and found some old firewalls (Palo Alto, FortiGates, and similar devices). We were offered the chance to take them for personal use and "dispose" of them that way.
It got me wondering: isn’t it possible to just flash custom firmware (like OPNsense, for example) onto such hardware appliances to make them "better" and more up-to-date?
Has anyone here had experience with that or even done something like this themselves?
Thanks and best regards :)
https://redd.it/1md9qmg
@r_systemadmin
CEO wants to track all the laptops to ensure no one works out of our Province/State. Any recommendations for a tracking software?
Basically the CEO and senior leadership wants to have some sort of tracking software ensuring no remote workers are working out of Province or out of country.
We are a small organization that uses Google Workspace with some users that have access to the Microsoft world (Teams, Excel and the whole suite)
We are currently using Intune, Sentinel one and GoTo resolve. All these systems feed us the IPs and other information to track the users but it's passive and we would have to check individual records.
Any software in the market that will help us achieve this tracking request?
Thanks in advance fellow sysadmins
https://redd.it/1mcykb2
@r_systemadmin
blocking NTLM broke SMB.
We used Group Policy to block NTLM, which broke SMB. However, we removed the policy and even added a new policy to allow NTLM explicitly. gpupdate /force many times, but none of our network shares are accessible, and other weird things like not being able to browse to the share through its DNS alias.
https://redd.it/1meee8l
@r_systemadmin
Pre-solving this nightmare issue for you
A user got an email from internal and it "goes to their spam box." You move the email out of the spam box, back into inbox, and it goes back to spam a few seconds later he says.
That's odd, our mail rule that sets internal to internal at SCL level -1 or whatever is a thing. Run a trace, delivered normally. KQL query - delivered normally. Not junk. Not ignore conversation feature. No block list. No mailbox rules. No Outlook plugins.
I finally remote in because he's not on a job site. It's going to a folder literally called "spambox"
We don't have anything that does that. Ask AI because I'm so done with this shit at this point.
Day 3 of trying to figure this shit out. IT WAS HIS ****ING SAMSUNG MAIL APP ON HIS PHONE.
Which we don't allow people to use because it doesn't work. We tell them to use the Outlook App, which is probably renamed Copilot AI Mail Extreme Edition X .NET Copilot Edition by now.
FML I need a smoke break. I don't not smoke but Canada is on fire, can't see shit here, so going outside is technically a smoke break.
https://redd.it/1meama3
@r_systemadmin
I'm getting employees that I have to train from scratch. Now what?
First of all, thanks to everyone for their suggestions, thoughts, and condolences. It's been a bear of a month since I lost my boss, but things are sailing smooth for the moment. In the end, I got his title, his pay, and all of his responsibility.
Management approved 4 part time employees for me that are other staff members in other areas of my hospital. Lab Techs, Rad Techs, Scrub Techs, who show some aptitude with computers and the troubleshooting abilities I can train into Help Desk employees. These are skilled and educated employees, but not IT people.
I've got the beginnings of a training program (IT basics, Networking Basics, Tools we use), but what would you teach a bunch of people who are willing and eager to help, but don't necessarily know that much about IT?
https://redd.it/1me8bhf
@r_systemadmin
How do you work alongside a deeply entrenched legacy architect who resists change and views collaboration as a threat?
I stepped into a system admin role back in April. The team is small: a couple juniors, me, my boss, and a senior architect who’s been with the company for 20+ years. He basically built the network from scratch and still runs it like his personal fiefdom. To be fair, he’s extremely knowledgeable but also highly defensive, and seems to go head to head with my boss often. None of my business, anywho.
My main job is to modernize things…replace outdated monitoring away from Nagios, roll out NAPALM automation, that kind of stuff. Naturally, change is hard in any long-running environment, but it’s especially difficult here, or… have I just not worked with a wide enough array of personality types? The architect actively resists nearly every improvement. He has a rule against Docker (won’t allow it at all), rule against multiple VM’s broken up by app, blocks monitoring agents because they “use too much overhead,” insists on manually benchmarking resource usage before greenlighting anything(which is a good idea right?) , and won’t allow more than 50% hardware resource utilization on servers “for fault tolerance.” Has weird ideas remote log servers should only pull logs and remote clients never push, only allows DHCP and DNS to be managed by his shell scripts, etc. which I get since DNS is delicate.
He also has a very rigid, inconsistent subnetting scheme- /24s split by room and purpose, but implemented differently across sites. Everything is over-architected. And naming conventions? God help you if you deviate from his vision. I suppose this is all normal stuff from a long running admin?
Hey, he built it I’m using it all good who really cares.
Im used to working with relaxed folks and this guy does comes off as constantly talking down to people and getting visibly agitated which I would say is bringing me to Reddit. Some days he’ll just snap and say stuff like “I don’t care about my job anymore,” loud enough for others to hear. Personally I think it gets unprofessional when it’s bitching every day with big sighs. I share a space with him, and every day the other junior team members quietly ask if I want to go sit in their office instead, just to get away from the tension. Which, why would I leave the room and work with anyone else? I was hired to work with this guy.
There’s also a corporate team that handles change control and implements our changes on the network side. They’re very nice to work with. When I try to collaborate with them directly to push things forward, he gets pissed and says stuff like, “They wouldn’t be able to fix anything if you didn’t tell them what was wrong,” as if working with others is some kind of betrayal.
I’m getting good experience, even with all the politics and friction. My loose plan is to stick it out for 2–3 years, then move on, hey could be longer too. But in the meantime, how do you work around someone like this? A legacy architect who built the empire, thinks everyone’s out to tear it down, and makes collaboration a nightmare?
https://redd.it/1mdzgdh
@r_systemadmin
User can't find her C:\ drive - It was her C:\ drive
Shoutout to Sarah — one of the rare end users who’s genuinely nice, curious, and wants to learn how tech works. We love Sarah.
Today’s puzzle:
Sarah couldn’t find her C: drive.
She opens what looks like the right folder, sees all the familiar files... then confidently says: “Nope. This isn’t it.”
I show her the file path in plaintext Windows Explorer:
\> This PC > OS (C:\\)
Still nope.
Eventually, she explains that there's another folder with the same filenames but different content — also under C:\\.
We dig around. Turns out she had a shortcut pointing to a very specific subfolder mirrored across profile folders, and the recent GPO update removed this shortcut.
So I fixed it by re-creating the shortcut, added Target: explorer.exe "file path" and dragged it to the taskbar for her.
She proceeded to thank me for my help.
And that’s when it hit me:
Most days, shortcuts break and users get frustrated. I have been yelled at for this in my previous analyst role where people only cared about getting the task done... But today?
The shortcut broke and someone got curious. Sarah wanted to understand why her files felt familiar but wrong. She trusted her instincts, asked questions, and stayed gracious the whole time.
That’s rare.
So here’s to Sarah — proof that empathy and curiosity are still alive, hope exists, and a kitten is born.
https://redd.it/1me2lv6
@r_systemadmin
Have you ever considered SNMPv3 packet size overhead a drawback compared to SNMPv2?
I’m in a discussion with a co-worker who argues that SNMPv3 introduces too much overhead in terms of packet size and CPU usage on network hardware, especially when polling at scale. He prefers SNMPv2c for that reason alone.
Has anyone actually run into a situation where the additional bytes in SNMPv3 were a legitimate performance concern, like enough to justify avoiding it entirely on some devices? Or is this just a theoretical gripe and not really a problem in real-world deployments?
https://redd.it/1mdzxgz
@r_systemadmin
Thickheaded Thursday - July 31, 2025
Howdy, /r/sysadmin!
It's that time of the week, Thickheaded Thursday! This is a safe (mostly) judgement-free environment for all of your questions and stories, no matter how silly you think they are. Anybody can answer questions! My name is AutoModerator and I've taken over responsibility for posting these weekly threads so you don't have to worry about anything except your comments!
https://redd.it/1mdxgpt
@r_systemadmin
Who is in charge of checking the terms and conditions of a new software?
Hello fellow redditors,
I am new to IT. We are a small company. We do not yet have established policies on things are done.
One of our architect teams is expanding their field and start getting new software. The local distributors of these software often say what they need to say to make the sale.
For example "you can install the same license on as many computers you like, but you can only have one session online with the credentials we will provide. So you need only one license for your entire team".
I e-mailed them asking for the above to be sent in written and of course they pretend they never said it.
So, I need your help to understand. Who is in charge of checking the terms and conditions of a new software before it is bought? To me it sounds like a legal issue, so it would be the legal team.
https://redd.it/1mdv2ld
@r_systemadmin
New Spoofing Method?
Hello fellow sysadmins, is anyone encountering a new spoofing method where your users are receiving an email to themselves with an html attachment? We have had a handful of users receiving a note/email to themselves that they do not recall sending. Even after changing their office 365 credentials as well as resetting their MFA they will still receive these spoof emails. We have email filtering through Sonic wall and it's done quite a great job protecting from spam/phishing however this spoof method is pretty wild since it's coming as a note directly from the affected user's email address. Wanted to see if anyone else was encountering this and possible feedback on how to counter this.
https://redd.it/1mdqn17
@r_systemadmin
Farm to table, artisanal only MacOS update consultant
I work for a small/medium sized shop: 1200ish endpoints, roughly 10 percent of those are servers, 10 MacOS workstations total out of all of our devices.
Up until recently, we've allowed our Macs to exist in a walled garden, managed by a consultant. However, after a serious security incident, we've decided to bring those machines back into the fold, and do some light monitoring/management.
What monitoring/management has meant for us is putting the Defender XDR client on our Macs, and putting intune policies on those macs to govern update cadence. We're requiring OS updates to be applied 21 days after patch issue if they're applicable for the machine.
The farm to table, artisanal upgrades only consultant is talking to the manager of the group with the most Macs (under 5) with gloom and doom FUD about Intune and Mac updates. His position is that he can only do updates after a long period of research, and that he then applies them individually, with sensitivity to the work the user performs.
I think this is bullshit. The "farm to table upgrade" thing came from me, as this all sounds like a bunch of hooey to protect this guy's revenue stream. I'm not a MacOS guy, but if it's truly the case that Macs need an individually crafted and researched OS upgrade strat, then those machines aren't suitable in an enterprise environment. Other orgs much larger than ours make Macs work, so again,I'm smelling BS
My consultant buddy also had a FUD filled email talking about remote data wipes if IT wants (um yeah, if we suspect compromise), website restriction (duh) and "data harvesting", whatever that means in an environment where the machines and data are all owned by my org.
Thoughts?
https://redd.it/1mdohpq
@r_systemadmin
How do you document access + tool workflows without repeating yourself 10x a week?
We’ve hit that stage where every new hire asks the same stuff:
* “How do I request access to XYZ?”
* “Where do I find API creds for staging?”
* “Which VPN config do I use again?”
We’ve got the answers in a wiki. No one reads it.
Slack threads? Get buried.
By week 2, we’re drowning in repeated hand-holding. And it's not like we're not busy with actual infra work.
Anyone found a good way to **scale onboarding around internal tools and access** without writing a 200-page PDF? Bonus points if it actually gets read.
Not trying to reinvent the wheel, just tired of being the wheel.
https://redd.it/1mdgdxo
@r_systemadmin
What’s a realistic cybersecurity starting point for a business under 20 staff?
We don’t have IT staff, but we’re handling sensitive customer data.
If you had to set up a minimal yet effective cybersecurity stack for a small team, what would be your top 3 priorities?
https://redd.it/1mdec5v
@r_systemadmin
Best Cloud security company for enterprise?
What cloud security companies do you think are leading the way for enterprise environments in 2025?
We’re looking at options and would love input from anyone with real world experience. Looking for companies with strong capabilities across areas like CSPM, CWPP, CIEM, container/Kubernetes security and support for hybrid or multi cloud environments (AWS, Azure, GCP).
Established players are on our radar but I’m open to hearing about others that might be flying under the radar or offering great value. Would really appreciate your experiences, recommendations and any gotchas you’ve encountered during deployments.
https://redd.it/1mdd4zf
@r_systemadmin
Anyone tried SOC 2 with Delve?
Cross-post from r/cybersecurity:
I'm part of a lean (2-person) IT team at an early stage startup and SOC 2 has become non-negotiable. We can't invest too much time for this, since we're just two people and neither of us has a lot of experience with compliance, so our CEO wants to bring in a platform and is pretty much set on Delve, mostly for the AI selling point.
I'm a little apprehensive though since they're fairly new, so I wanted to know if there are any challenges or friction points I've got to look out for if we do end up getting Delve. Thanks!
https://redd.it/1md0g9t
@r_systemadmin
What infra certs are hot right now?
I'm currently a Sr. Systems Engineer managing almost every aspect of my company's infrastructure.
The networking, all of the Microsoft environment (users & groups, device management/Intune, security/defender, exchange, SharePoint). I manage our cloud environments, stuff in both AWS and Azure. Pretty much everything that isn't end user support of DevOps, AI or programming.
Years ago I was studying for my CCNA and Security+ but life kept getting happening and I would put them on the back burner.
I feel I now have the experience I was trying to get the CCNA for, maybe even the Security+ too, so perhaps the experience will speak more to those than the certs at this point.
I only have my A+ from like 2008. And the reason I'm asking is simply because I want leverage to hit the next level of income.
Is cloud all the rage now? DevOps? I'm not too particular about a certain direction in my career, I like working with technology in general, and so far I've been capable of learning anything out in front of me so I'm wide open to input.
Just looking to settle on a target, but one that's desirable and in demand.
https://redd.it/1mcx9bo
@r_systemadmin