Or how very, very much I hate my job...
So I have talked a bit about the amazing lack of security that exists at my company... But wait, there's more!!!
So two weeks or so ago, they brought a new IT guy on, he was an internal transfer and has been with the company for a while but he was the guy that made the ID badges... Well guess what, I got to train him (for about 2 hours)... The FIRST... FIRST... time he opened a PC and looked inside, was with me there showing him what to do...
Oh but it gets better... Another guy was brought in about a month ago. Nice guy, he and I have become friends and I really do think he has a solid bit of potential as a technical guy. He has done some desktop support and deployment in the past but nothing really serious. Anyways, we are in the middle of an AD migration, merging two .com domains due to a company merger. And he was tasked with going around to the machines that had failed the migration to see if the had the right .msi file on the machine. So once again, I get to step in... I got to show him how to use the highly complex and newfangled "dir /s /p" command.
Bitch about it is, these two are both full time, with benefits and making about 2x what I am making as a contractor. I really hate this place...
Adventures in IT contracting
- mekender
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- Joined: Tue Aug 19, 2008 9:31 pm
Adventures in IT contracting
“I no longer need to run as a Presidential Candidate for the Socialist Party. The Democrat Party has adopted our platform.” - Norman Thomas, a six time candidate for president for the Socialist Party, 1944
- skb12172
- Posts: 7310
- Joined: Tue Aug 19, 2008 12:45 am
Re: Adventures in IT contracting
Time to move on and let Rome burn.
There must be an end to this intimidation by those who come to this great country, but reject its culture.
- 308Mike
- Posts: 16537
- Joined: Wed Aug 13, 2008 3:47 pm
Re: Adventures in IT contracting
Who are you contracted to, and are they hiring??? I can cure many of your headaches RIGHT NOW (we can talk technical stuff and guns while waiting for the machines to finish migrating!!)






POLITICIANS & DIAPERS NEED TO BE CHANGED OFTEN AND FOR THE SAME REASON
A person properly schooled in right and wrong is safe with any weapon. A person with no idea of good and evil is unsafe with a knitting needle, or the cap from a ballpoint pen.
I remain pessimistic given the way BATF and the anti gun crowd have become tape worms in the guts of the Republic. - toad
A person properly schooled in right and wrong is safe with any weapon. A person with no idea of good and evil is unsafe with a knitting needle, or the cap from a ballpoint pen.
I remain pessimistic given the way BATF and the anti gun crowd have become tape worms in the guts of the Republic. - toad
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Re: Adventures in IT contracting
Oh, I could tell stories about IT contracting. In fact, I have.
But I'm not bitter.
But I'm not bitter.
- Denis
- Posts: 6570
- Joined: Fri Aug 22, 2008 5:29 am
Re: Adventures in IT contracting
LMAO!mekender wrote:I got to show him how to use the highly complex and newfangled "dir /s /p" command.
- Weetabix
- Posts: 6113
- Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2008 11:04 pm
Re: Adventures in IT contracting
To be fair, people think I'm magic when I do that one. It's sad, really, how far away DOS is.mekender wrote:So once again, I get to step in... I got to show him how to use the highly complex and newfangled "dir /s /p" command.
Note to self: start reading sig lines. They're actually quite amusing. :D
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Re: Adventures in IT contracting
That's just weird. They seem to have you over a barrel, and they know it.
Traditionally IT contractors make quite a bit more per hour than full-time employees, for several reasons. You often pick up a contractor just for a specific skill they have, which is valuable.
Or if you're hiring contractors in place of employees, the friction and overhead are much lower saving you (as an employer) a great deal of money, at least some of which you will he forced (because they know this) to pass on to the contractors in hourly rate.
As a worker, with a choice between a contract position and an otherwise equivalent fulltime position, the contract position had better pay more to compensate for lack of benefits, possible tax disadvantages, etc.
Traditionally IT contractors make quite a bit more per hour than full-time employees, for several reasons. You often pick up a contractor just for a specific skill they have, which is valuable.
Or if you're hiring contractors in place of employees, the friction and overhead are much lower saving you (as an employer) a great deal of money, at least some of which you will he forced (because they know this) to pass on to the contractors in hourly rate.
As a worker, with a choice between a contract position and an otherwise equivalent fulltime position, the contract position had better pay more to compensate for lack of benefits, possible tax disadvantages, etc.
Maybe we're just jaded, but your villainy is not particularly impressive. -Ennesby
If you know what you're doing, you're not learning anything. -Unknown
Sanity is the process by which you continually adjust your beliefs so they are predictively sound. -esr
If you know what you're doing, you're not learning anything. -Unknown
Sanity is the process by which you continually adjust your beliefs so they are predictively sound. -esr
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Re: Adventures in IT contracting
Now I know that I am getting old and forgetting things. I cannot remember the last time I used dir. I also had to look up /s. Back in the day I actually read the DOS 5.0 manual cover to cover multiple times so that I knew what I was doing. DOS is far away unless you're the kind of person digging in the guts of things. Windows has made me weak.mekender wrote:I got to show him how to use the highly complex and newfangled "dir /s /p" command.
- mekender
- Posts: 13189
- Joined: Tue Aug 19, 2008 9:31 pm
Re: Adventures in IT contracting
So the reason I took this gig was that after being unemployed for almost 4 months, I was basically out of money and this kept me from having to have my parents and in-laws pay my bills. The problem is, this gig is so low paying that I still cant survive... But no one is interviewing/hiring me... I really have just come to HATE recruiters, they all seem totally worthless to me and have done jack shit for me. So, I get up every day and drudge through the bullshit once more, hoping like hell they don't cut me loose as companies are known to do to contractors. If they do, I will be flat broke and have utility bills start getting shut off within a week or two...
“I no longer need to run as a Presidential Candidate for the Socialist Party. The Democrat Party has adopted our platform.” - Norman Thomas, a six time candidate for president for the Socialist Party, 1944
- mekender
- Posts: 13189
- Joined: Tue Aug 19, 2008 9:31 pm
Re: Adventures in IT contracting
Yea but this is a contract for a Windows 7 deployment... They needed people that could carry desktop towers and follow printed directions, I could teach a high school kid to do my job in a day.Greg wrote:That's just weird. They seem to have you over a barrel, and they know it.
Traditionally IT contractors make quite a bit more per hour than full-time employees, for several reasons. You often pick up a contractor just for a specific skill they have, which is valuable.
Or if you're hiring contractors in place of employees, the friction and overhead are much lower saving you (as an employer) a great deal of money, at least some of which you will he forced (because they know this) to pass on to the contractors in hourly rate.
As a worker, with a choice between a contract position and an otherwise equivalent fulltime position, the contract position had better pay more to compensate for lack of benefits, possible tax disadvantages, etc.
Course I am doing far more than just that, but that is what I was hired to do.
“I no longer need to run as a Presidential Candidate for the Socialist Party. The Democrat Party has adopted our platform.” - Norman Thomas, a six time candidate for president for the Socialist Party, 1944