Initial commit: HPR Knowledge Base MCP Server
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Episode: 929
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Title: HPR0929: The Knightcast KC0060 : "Storytime"
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0929/hpr0929.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 05:05:40
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---
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Bundle
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&
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&
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&
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on the edge of real and cyberspace there's one place you can go
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on the edge of real and cyberspace there's one place you can go and you found it
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welcome to the nightcast the one and only podcast at Yoon's Tech into a way of life and
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let's the technology work for you my name's nightwise and for the coming 60
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minutes or so I'll be your host on this episode of the nightcast KC-0060 story time
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for more information and a shoutout head on over to the website www.nightwise.com
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that's can i g h t w i s e dot com or you'll find the links to everything we
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talk about and the nightwise dot com media feed you can use this media feed to
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subscribe to all the nightwise dot com content the nightcast podcast and
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the k w t v screencast and get them delivered to your favorite pod catcher
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automatically letting technology work for you if you want to get in touch with
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us you can feed back at nightwise dot com is the email address and of course you
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can find us on twitter twitter dot com slash nightwise you can look for us in
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google plus by looking for nightwise or on facebook facebook dot com slash nightwise
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com hey guys and girls welcome to the edge of real and cyberspace welcome to
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another episode of the nightcast we are a little bit behind on our k w t v airing
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schedule but that's because we're kind of doing a lot of stuff in the backhand
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at the moment I have been working hard on a new blog and on moving nightwise dot
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com to another server and I've also been jiggling around some hardware around
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the house to get myself a new and cool setup I sold one of my iMAX and I am
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currently waiting to install a brand spanking you i7 mac mini with 16 gigabytes
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of ram hooked up to 220 full-inch screens making it one hell of a server for
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both my OS X line server and the countless virtual machines that I'll be
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running on it we also my it'll also become my production machine but at the
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moment there's not much there I just have my trusty mag book pro and two empty
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monitor arms because I don't got the screens yet and a little mtv my closet in my
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cupboard underneath my desk because I don't have to make many heads and I'm a
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little bit tied down to what I have so no very fancy screencast right now just
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another great episode of the nightcast I mentioned something about blogs and I
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wanted to tell you about the new blog that I started at Joe Hendrix dot
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WordPress dot com but link in the show notes I've actually started a personal
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blog why well quite frankly because I wanted to split the contents between the
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nightwise dot com website for all you wise guys wise girls and to you know some
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other people who want to read some stuff on another website long winded written
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articles on my personal blog nice entertaining stuff on nightwise dot com you
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can pick and choose and today as a little bit of a showcase I'm gonna bring you
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two blog posts that I read on my personal blog in this episode of story time
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you know the drill you close your eyes and say unless you are in the car you sit
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back relax and let me tell the story as you can just enjoy you don't have a
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read you just have to sit back relax enjoy the show because we'll be back after
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these two stories because it's story time
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a little while ago I was confronted with a very peculiar remark in the office you
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don't have your email client open all the time like the rest of your co-workers
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when I heard the sentence I had to turn it over in my head a couple of times my
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initial reaction was one of defense like somehow I'd been scolded or that
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there had been a vague insinuation that I wasn't working as hard as my co-workers
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because I did not spend all of my time in my email client but as I sat down in the
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car for the drive home I am mulled the request over in my head over and over again
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and came to the conclusion that it was absolutely absurd not the remark itself of course
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it was a valent Cobbon to make when somebody deviates from the norm he stands out
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and as behavior is noticed by the rest of the group it's a matter of common group dynamics
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what after some philosophical pondering did surface was the absurd realization that email
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is considered a valid form of occupation these days the more males you answer the harder you work
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somehow in the crazy group mind of the cubicle work be the quantity of communication has become
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the norm of productivity not the quality of that communication where does this bizarre mindset come
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from if we take a look at our modern history the roots of this uh way of thinking can be found
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in the industrially revolution back then workers had to come to the factory and produce
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ex amounts of goods in order to meet their quota as you are sowing together ladies corsets or
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smashed a piece of raw iron into the shape of a bolt beneath the giant weld the more pieces you
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churned out the harder you worked but those days have come and gone and still their echo remains
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as we march towards our office building and sit inside the cubicles of our conveyor belt of ideas
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we try to find meaning in this landscape where we no longer produce anything tangible
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I've been running around all day long and it feels like I didn't get anything done today
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I take that all of you and all of us including you and your boss have murmured this sentence to
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their beloved at some occasion it's a symptom of the fact that our technology has changed our way
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of working at a pace that our brain cannot keep up with and I'm not talking about the pace of life
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or the speed of which we interact I'm talking about the fact that we are no longer sowing together
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corsets but are welding together abstract procedures ideas and workflows that no longer give us
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anything tangible to show at the end of the day so the human mind goes in search of patterns it
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recognizes in this new factory of thoughts numbers of meetings attended numbers of calls received
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I got 14 voicemails today look at the 45 business cards I got at the conference today I had over a
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hundred and fifty emails to get through everywhere we can we try to count the quantities of work
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to give us hold on this completely abstract work environment so how many emails does it take
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to be a good off his drum it's a fact let question back in the 1900s your foreman gave you a
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quota to meet five hundred bolts by the end of the day and that would be something you could do
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you could make the bolts count the bolts and show your foreman the bolts at the end of the day
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life was easy you know you knew when you were behind and had to speed up you knew when you were
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ahead and could slack off a little but these days it's not like that anymore
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but if quantity of emails processed is the new bolt I challenge you to step up to your manager
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and ask for that quota how many emails a day is the quota for a good office worker
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the question is utterly absurd but if we take a look at the way we seem to count our emails
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it's a valid question nonetheless if we all want to meet our quota where does it end
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because you have to face it if we all want to meet our virtual bolt quota we need to push out some
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emails so don't tap your co-worker on the shoulder email him even if he's right next to you and
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please put as many co-workers in the cc field as you can because the good thing about email is that
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you cannot only punch your out your virtual bolt you can also share your hard labor with your
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co-workers to keep them up to date in the process you send them virtual bolts to count and on the
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end of the day we are just one big emailing swarm of office bees that have produced a thousand
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virtual bolts a piece but we didn't get anything done there was a time where communication was a
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supportive process of the production process and somewhere along the line communication has become
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the goal on its own and the one thing that makes me crack up when we think about this our lines
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like I wanted to get so much done today but all I did was trying to get through my emails it's
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hilarious somewhere handling emails has become more important than handling work this can be right
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can it so if you want to step away from the virtual conveyor belt of bolts try reasoning with
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yourself the next time you want to hit send do I need to send out a message to the co-worker that's
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sitting right next to me if he is or she is within spitting slapping talking shouting or walking
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range don't it will do both your delabitated physical condition and your deteriorating
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social skills and good to get the frack out of your seat and walk on over I'll send them the
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email otherwise you'll forget that's a good one too unless you are working in the Alzheimer
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office of terminal Alzheimer patient there is a small but feasible chance that your co-workers
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are able to remember stuff you tell them unless of course you eat we write everything down in an
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email and then swamp each other with emails yes that will help really perhaps it's your personal
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visit to his or her office or the sweat stains on your co-worker or the sweat stains under your
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arms that make your co-worker notice you and remember that there was something that you asked him
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I need to cover my ass oh oh yeah please let's go uh let's all go uh office Gestapo on each other
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by emailing every single detail to underline the fact that you trust absolutely nobody at face value
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the fact that you need to send out every critical are non-critical event in an email also says a
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lot about how trustworthy you feel about yourself there are important things that need to be formally
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communicated but for the love of God let's not bury ourselves in more democracy sorry I don't
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have the time I have a lot of emails to get through that one even happens to me sometimes but it's
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bizarre unless you walk at a Russian spamming factory doing emails is not your main task
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to round it up I can conclude with a simple logical deduction that even Spock would find
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enlightening if we all spend less time doing email and more time getting things done we will
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get less emails and so the email spiral let's just sound wrong will be broken for all of us
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so
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grandpa
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What's an IT guy? Just close your eyes a minute and imagine sitting in your rocking chair
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with one of your grandchildren on your lap. As she absolutely plays with her holographic
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Nintendo DS66, she asks you a very odd question. Grandpa, what's an IT guy?
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You look up startled, momentarily distracted from the YahooTube video you were watching on your
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transparent digital contacts. You sigh, look at her, and start telling the story of the old days
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when they still had IT guys. Although this example may look like science fiction,
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the Yahoo YouTube merger is actually the more implausible factor in my example. The DS,
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the transparent contacts, and the question are one day to become very, very real.
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In my 15 years on the job, I've seen many changes in the landscape of the IT profession.
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From the time where single programmers wrote up an entire suite of bookkeeping software for a
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company, and holding that company ransom later because they were the only one who knew how it
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worked, to the aftermath of the .com bubble where everybody with a keyboard and a geocities
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account suddenly became webmaster or web designer. I remember the time where I pondered whether or
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or not I needed to get my MCSE certification or where I friendically tried to fight into
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right pins on the motherboard to attach the cable of the power switch. In those 15 years,
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a lot has changed. Not only has my career moved along, I started out as a tech sales guy at
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a small computer shop and I'm currently holding a position of demand manager for new technologies
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at a Dutch multinational, the landscape we've worked in has also changed dramatically.
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When I used to ponder about the future, I thought us tech heads would become the predominant
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group in the workforce of the future. As I saw IT technology grab hold of society and sink
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its digital teeth into the soft underbelly of our communities, I wondered how many techies it would
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take to keep it all running. Lots of them, right? But perhaps, I was wrong. As I integrated,
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as IT integrated our daily lives more and more, the techies started to vanish.
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Where at first every company still had its own IT crowd, nudged away somewhere in the basements,
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yes sub in there, and given the task of keeping the servers up and running while also taking care
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of the fish in the company pond, yes I've been there too, the first generation of outsourcing
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was taking its toll. I've seen help desk departments go extinct, gradually replaced by outsourcing
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partners on the floor, and in time I walked the floor of companies where they did not have any
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techies in house whatsoever. Every server was house somewhere in a data center,
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every user was remotely supported, and once in a blue moon you would see a nerdy looking guy with
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white patches around the knee section of their jeans, linger around by the coffee machine.
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Only with those white kneecaps could you recognize a field engineer.
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The white kneecaps are a result of kneeling down on carpets a lot to fix computers of users.
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I too have been there. Coming from the age where the in-house IT guys were revert or hated by
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the entire company, but where everybody knew your name, it changed to a work floor where some
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strange kid you didn't know comes by to fix your computer, and you let him.
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But even the white kneecaps will start to go extinct someday. As we start using computers that
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don't open up anymore and use mobile operating systems that do not require reinstalling,
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the rollout of our system engineers is starting to dwindle away.
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As we slide down or should I say ascend into the world of cloud computers,
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their services and those of their bread run taking care of the service in data center are becoming
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obsolete. Hard disks fail? The data is in the cloud, network goes down, I'll just plop in my 3G
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dongle. Laptop eaten by dog, I'll just pick up a fresh one. All I need to do is log in and
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configure my account. With the consumerization of IT, the second generation of outsourcing the
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migration to the cloud and the fundamental change of how we approach you and use technology,
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things will change for the IT guys. In my own career I've found I've become a diplomatically
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liaison between technology and users, assessing their needs and seeing what can be used to meet
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their demands. Although I still have a technical background, it all more my communication skills
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and my creativity that helped me find a solution than actually popping open a case and yanking out
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some wires. I too am a fallen angel that now walks between the users. My jeans are deep,
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deep shade of blue even around the knees and my hands are no longer scratched from the sharp edges
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of the insides of PC casings. As I look to the future I wonder what interesting times lie ahead
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of us in the IT business, how our role that I've seen evolving from bookkeepers to engineers
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will go more and more into the realms of digital diplomats, where we wield knowledge and insights
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about technology we might no longer truly understand. I once said that a computer should be like a
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toaster, easy to operate and processing the simplicity of an appliance. As I punch in this blog post
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on my iPad I realize that my prophecy has come true. My iPad is a toaster. It just works and there's
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nothing to fix. And we don't need IT guys in the next room to fix a toaster or do we?
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Well guys and girls, I hope you enjoyed this episode of Storytime where I actually gave you
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a little bit of an insight into my professional career and that's something I don't do very often
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on the nightcast. I hope you'll have a great week. I hope you enjoyed this show and I hope
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you'll let technology work for you. We will be back next week until then you know where to go.
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www.nightwise.com for the website, subscribe to the media feed or look for the nightcast in iTunes
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and of course you can follow us on twitter twitter.com slash nightwise or find us on Google plus.
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If you want to do something for the show, do something very very easy to do, share our RSS feed
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or our media feed with one of your friends. Recommend us bring new listeners to the nightcast
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or thenightwise.com website. That's about all we have time for this week. Let technology work for
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you not the other way around and see you next week. Bye. Thanks for coming to the edge of real
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and cyberspace. You have been listening to the nightcast. Send your feedback, questions,
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promos or rants to nightwise at nightwise.com or Skype us on nightwise. For more information
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visit the site on www.nightwise.com or look for us in iTunes by searching for the nightcast.
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Please remember there's a real world beyond cyberspace but it's not all that important.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio. We are a community podcast
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network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday. Today's show, like all our shows,
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was contributed by an HBR listener by yourself. If you ever consider recording a podcast,
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then visit our website to find out how easy it really is. Hacker Public Radio was founded by the
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Digital.Pound and the International Computer Club. HBR is funded by the Binary Revolution
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at binref.com. All binref projects are crowd-responsive by linear pages. From shared hosting to
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custom private clouds, go to lunarpages.com for all your hosting needs. Unless otherwise stasis,
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today's show is released under a creative commons, attribution, share alike,
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videos held license.
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