Your coworkers are not your customers.

Perhaps some of the problems between IT and the rest of a company are caused by treating non-IT as customers like the IT department is not just a separate function in the organization, but a separate organization itself. I’ve been part of internal IT departments that call other employees in the same company, “customers” and I think it’s probably a net negative for all involved. Those of us in the IT department don’t feel part of the company’s mission, or even that we have to be part of it. Our colleagues are no longer people we can relate to, but are a number on a scorecard or just the enemy of our systems. On the other side, in the company as a whole, I suppose it’s just that they don’t need to treat IT staff like human beings, which is a little bit of an exaggeration and I suppose it doesn’t really stop someone who would be an asshole anyway. For end-users, though it does get frustrating. They don’t think IT understands the business or their priorities and they are right.

I get the motivation to treat end-users as customers. First off, end-users as a term doesn’t sound that great. Mostly, though, it’s that the IT leadership wants the best possible service for the company. Calling people customers just seems to be a lazy way to say that’s happening. If they are a customer and customers are always right, then the service will be great! Not so true.

Ultimately, treating your fellow employees like customers is keeping personal relationships from occurring. No one is seeing the IT department as part of the company, so there isn’t any engagement. IT sees itself as a punching bag and the other departments see IT as a creator of rules and holder up of progress. If the IT department can start seeing itself as part of the company and the rest of the company does the same, we can get back to using technology to solve business problems instead of just being one.

Internet In A Box

One of my big projects for the year is to create what I’m calling, Internet In a Box. It’s a self-contained device able to provide social networking and collaboration to small groups. Its intent is to be used by protestors in the event their government turns off the internet and cellular service.
Currently, the project is shifting from planning to development and consists of a Raspberry Pi with Debian serving NextCloud’s collaboration suite via Apache and MariaDB along with Dolphin open-source social networking. Load testing on the Raspberry Pi is proving to be the toughest hurdle thus far. I will either change hardware (wireless at least) or attempt changes in NextCloud. There is a NextCloud image specifically for Raspberry Pi’s that can be tested, as well.
Down the line, I would like to examine distributed storage and compute. Currently, the focus will be on the core product, which is an isolated sharing platform.

Extra Life Game Day Roundup

Extra Life game day has come and gone now. Every year on the second Saturday of November people go full telethon for 24 hours of live gaming. Usually, I spend it at the hospital raising money by dungeon mastering some DnD games throughout the day. This year, of course, is a little different and I finally jumped on the streaming bandwagon. It was much less of a shitshow than I assumed and was a lot of fun. I played some Darkest Dungeon on the PC to start the day and ended with a live reading of some H.P. Lovecraft for a worldwide audience of 2 on Twitch. All in all, I had a good time and people were kind enough to open their pocket books to donate to a good cause.

You can still donate at https://www.extra-life.org/participant/BenStitt and while there you can see some clips of my reading and playing.

Linux Gaming

I’m trying, I promise!

Really, I want to do it badly. I’ve wanted to just go full-time desktop Linux for 12 years now, but gaming is so hard! I love tinkering and prefer that to gaming, so why is it so tough?

I’m currently running Fedora 32 on my gaming PC, but dual booting with Windows for just about anything that isn’t from Steam or GoG. I dig my CoD and I’m sure someone gets it working, but that someone is not me. Anything with anti-cheat tech just doesn’t want to play at all.

I also tried doing GamerOS on a little mini PC I had around. Thought I’d go ahead and stream the heck out Steam games as my wifi is so good. Nope! I think that might be a hardware thing, though, because it runs everything like garbage.

One day! One day soon, I hope!

Little Things

Trying to get some work done at my house, I ended up calling an old client. The woman who answered the phone immediately knew who I was and told me how much she missed me and how I saved her life on many occasions. I’m pretty sure I didn’t literally save her life, but to someone working in a front office who can’t do something like email or print, when you fix that it’s pretty close. Something challenging like finding the minimum attenuation for wireless devices in a warehouse are the most interesting, but clearing Internet Explorer cache so a website works again makes someone a magician.

oh hey there

I’m Ben. This is my site. Welcome aboard. Quick one for you: I like technology, political theory, games, books, my dog and cat, race cars. I also haphazardly run spaceforce2024.com, which is home of my hobby video game project. Yup, I’m learning to make video games so I can hone my programming skills that are lackluster, at best. Also, I’m working on my pet project that has been trying to burst forth from my brain for a couple years now: thehackernomicon.com. It’s a great documentation site for IT pros that let you cut through the garbage of trying to find how to do something.