Paul
Active Member
Often PC's get a bad rap because IT departments don't like to spend time troubleshooting - it's easier to grab the latest Ghost image and put the computer back to stock - they don't care about the impact to the end user. Hell, even my own employees exhibit these traits despite my b*tching about it. My wife used to be a sysadmin for EDS on a huge state contract - they wouldn't spend more than 10 minutes troubleshooting before they'd reimage. (*so my wife will never click a link that doesn't make sense... I'm lucky there. Next training topic - don't put the house phone number on every form that asks for a number - to stop the 99% solicitor to 1% real call ratio). That approach irritates the crap out of me though. With very few basic troubleshooting steps, I can fix 97% of all viruses and slow-startup issues in under an hour. 2% require special boot disks to get rid of certain viruses that strap themselves in too early in the boot process. less than 1 percent requires re-imaging. HiJackThis and a basic understanding are all the tools I need.
This is dead on. I've worked with a lot of people in corporate and consumer IT, and most of them couldn't troubleshoot their way out of a wet paper bag. It's unfortunate, but that's the way it is. Personally I agree that 1% of problems REQUIRE a re-image, but I will generally look into a problem, note the cause, and if it is virus related I'll re-image the machine on GP.
I recently started fooling around with Ubuntu on my work laptop, and after a week I'm able to do about 75% of the things I do during a normal workday without kicking over to XP. As my understanding of how things work increases, things are getting better. I've been really happy with the speed of everything, but I get crashes at least twice a day. A lot of them are related to me adding/removing hardware, but I'm really disappointed that I can't hot swap a hard disk without having to reboot. I haven't yet decided if I'll stay with it full time, but if I can get everything working correctly I'm leaning towards yes.
I would never reccomend anything other than XP to anyone who asks though. It is definitely the universal OS.