There’s at least a few of us posting here that work in IT. I’m a Senior Systems Engineer with a background in Network and Systems Administration. The last couple days I’ve been thinking it would be nice to expand my available contacts to include the folks here on the boards. I don’t know if get off the ground, but I’d like to gauge interest.
I’m a Principle Technical Support Engineer, plying my trade amongst various unix-y operating systems. I’ve got a background in general system admin and C programming.
I am an applications programmer working in COBOL and DB2. I work for a major banking services provider. We’ve got just about every kind of platform there is. My code runs on OS390 mainframes.
I am a Senior UNIX Administrator. My background is unix, high-availability, and some storage. In the distant past I was a developer in FORTRAN (V and 77), and Smart Elements.
Programmer here. I work in the Windows/MS world. Background is C/C++ and now C# and .NET and all those goodies. Pretty good with SQL Server and SQL in general as well.
Have worked everywhere from 3-man startups to companies with thousands of employees. Currently working in a startup writing code for an electronic medical records product. Very nifty stuff.
I’m relatively new to the industry (5 years) and have worked with cobol, c++, VB6 and the Dot Net framework (presently VB.Net and c#).
The company I’m in has commissioned us IT guys with rewriting everything and money is no object. Well, at least it’s not instantiated.
It’s a good time where I’m at right now.
I’m what my firm calls a Production Control Planner.
This entails many things, which I could drone on about at great length, but I’ll spare everyone that.
At it’s most basic, the job deals with preparing for and scheduling of many kinds of batch processes that are run on our servers. This involves knowing what processes can be run at what times, for instance.
Tech writer. Mostly software, mostly telco software, currently on a contract documenting business processes for a financial firm. Would much rather be a regular employee somewhere (but not there—I have to wear business clothes there).
Also a hardware geek-lite, but I build my own PCs and provide HW and SW tech support for family, friends, and coworkers.
Network Software Switching Operator Maintainer in the US Army(MOS 25F). I run communications links(Data, and voice) for the end users. Right now the links I handle are normally 512K UHF shots, but have also supported T1 links.
Prior I was a network tech, and handled everything from installing MS Word to configuring Cisco equipment. Certified as a CNE 3, 4, and 5. A+, and just lost my CCNA certification. I failed the recert test by 24 points (700 point scale). Going to retake soon, and get it back.
Intrests lie in Networking, and more specifically network security. I think I was the only person that was upset I didn’t get to go to the Information Assurance conference two weeks ago.
I’m a humble, VB and VBA database programmer by preference. In practice, I spend a lot of my time mucking out maillists for a bulk mailer and occaisionally trying to determine what country “Kikuyu” is in, anyway (Kenya, not Japan). One of these days, I’ll probably wind up starting a thread in MPSIMS saying what not to do to an address (spaces are good!) and asking my fellow IT types to please allow more than 20 characters for an address line. I do get the odd, interesting special project, though.
I’m no snob. While C does have its merits, I’m building stuff to make people’s jobs easier, and these people may not even have computers at home. Last week, one of our customer service reps asked for help because nothing was showing up on her screen. When I walked over to her computer, the solution was simple. I turned her computer on. It was the same solution we used for a fellow whose “hard drive” wasn’t working. If I can build something people like this can use, I’ve done my job well.