- Jul 10, 2007
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VDI or anything VMware related.
yup, good call. forgot to list VM and security.
VDI or anything VMware related.
I can't think of anyone in their right mind who would use Exchange for something like this. It's not what it's made for. Different tools for different jobs.
This:
oracle/sybase SQL DBA
From 1999 to now this has been hottest and most lucrative of them all. Sometimes I wish I would have gotten in this field I would have retired by now if i wanted.
Networking is still super hot, simply can't find good qualified people, it's impossible.
True VMWare architects (and there aren't many of them) make bank as do real data center architects who can merge networking and SAN to merged fabrics/networks.
Overall the entire IT field is exploding for true experts in their area. Demand is really high and supply is extremely low = money.
From my experience, its just the opposite.
When I was working for an internet service provider in North Houston back in 2001 - 2003, our exchange server would crash at least once a month. We finally had to go with red hat linux and either postfix or sendmail. We had about 15,000 active cable modem subscribers, and maybe 40,000 - 50,000 email addresses.
Maybe with companies that have dedicated exchange admins / engineers, but I have seen a lot of internet service providers that dropped exchange in favor of a *nix based solution.
Your Exchange server probably had a hardware issue or a configuration issue. In my 10+ years of working directly with Exchange in a corporate environment, I can count on one hand the number of times it went down. A proper, mission-critical Exchange configuration would be clustered so outages should be extremely rare.
An ISP providing email services to its clientele isn't remotely close to a corporate environment. Corporate email environments are mission critical and provide a variety of services, such as VOIP integration, mobile device integration, email archiving functionality (legal requirements), etc. An ISP does not have to deal with that level of service. Providing a POP account is a far cry from the fully-integrated client experience of Outlook + Exchange.
In my experience exchange is great for less than a few thousand users as long as you have a halfway competent sys admin.
Once you start hitting a couple thousand exchange mailboxes you really need to have a dedicated exchange admin that knows WTF they're doing, as proper system setup becomes extremely critical.
And if you're just hosting a bunch of pop and imap accounts doing nothing complicated then exchange is not the logical solution anyway.
Your Exchange server probably had a hardware issue or a configuration issue. In my 10+ years of working directly with Exchange in a corporate environment, I can count on one hand the number of times it went down. A proper, mission-critical Exchange configuration would be clustered so outages should be extremely rare.
An ISP providing email services to its clientele isn't remotely close to a corporate environment. Corporate email environments are mission critical and provide a variety of services, such as VOIP integration, mobile device integration, email archiving functionality (legal requirements), etc. An ISP does not have to deal with that level of service. Providing a POP account is a far cry from the fully-integrated client experience of Outlook + Exchange.
Your Exchange server probably had a hardware issue or a configuration issue.
From what I was told, it was a design flaw in exchange - where all of the emails are stored in 1 large database. Unlike sendmail where each persons email is stored in their own inbox and separate from the everyone elses.
When the exchange database became corrupted (which was often), the database had to be restored from backup, or deleted.
If exchange has to have a dedicated admin for a few thousand users, that does not say a lot. I can think of lots of software that can have 20k, 30k, 40k, 50k, users and not need a dedicated sys admin.
Right now, anything VMware would have to be at the top of the list. Indy listed Sharepoint and that is also a nice feather in the cap to have. But I don't know anyone worth anything not employed though.
I made the switch from VMWare (and other server technologies) to Sharepoint and I kind of wish I could go back to VMWare.![]()
So question:
Right now I'm an Information Systems major with an ERP emphasis
I plan on getting some sort of SAP Certification before I graduate + the terp10 certification
My job currently will be introducing me to MS SQL. I'v never used it but I'm interested.
Questions:
1) ERP + SQL = good?
2) Are there any good certifications I can get in SQL?
3) What would you do with the given attributes?
Thanks!
IT is dead. the bubble burst long time ago.
I suggest u switch majors asap.
It's not hard, and there is a severe lack of people that actually know it properly and can build scalable best practice solutions. I think we bill our VMWare guy out at like 300+ an hour. 15,000 will get you a weeks worth of his time.
Holy shit.
