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Louis Rossmann oh my gosh!!! How do they don’t know how to do this? I’m learning this in high school. It is easy. You don’t need to be smart to do your job correctly.
DowskiVision You cant be serious? Nearly everyone is totally fucking useless across the board, its not gender specific in any capacity. In fact all the women in tech I know are on average better than their male counterparts because they flat have to be because of this sort of bullshit attitude. And no if this was a dude I imagine it would have been exactly the same because its still one of your customers and you arent helping the random dickhead company you are helping your customer. Also you are still getting paid for it.
In my experience people often panic in contact with problems simply because they treat it as "demon box" that do things. And even when given instructions step by step in simple words they "indoctrinated" them self that it is black magic so much that they are simply afraid to do anything. For them risk of breaking it even more is much bigger in their heads than prize of solving problem on their own. So they prefer "specialist". And I get that. I sometimes call such help too even when I'm capable of trying to solve it in other situations. Like bike repairs. I could probably learn how to do that my self. And mentioned case seems to me like becoming "IT specialist" cause there is good cash in it so "why not". And this way You my get person that does that "one thing" well just because it is only thing he/she knows and understands. So as long as all goes according to plan that person can do job well. Outside script there is panic mode. They are not out of passion in this business. Like not every driver is car mechanic or race fan. They where thought bare minimum to fulfil this task of installing and configuring app and there ends their knowledge. And that's probably bad in my opinion but more cause I don't see how you can like Your job this way. But in other hand we don't always get that opportunity to be able to pick job that we like.
I took a 2 year course on plugging in VGA and I am now fully certified to plug in VGA screens. How could you expect me to plug in an HDMI cable? You should've hired an HDMI specialist for that part of the job, duh.
@@hoseinqadam Well, I started now actually. The lockdown gives me time to go through the material myself. I hope to be certified by the end of the year.
how on earth people exist that cannot plug in VGA they have manuals for it. My friend who never used a computer before in his life is capable of finding the VGA and plugging it in because thats how easy it is to use. US education system must be in the drain if IT specialist means you cannot plug in the VGA
Not to be rude but hey, use shift or ctrl instead of spacebar to wake up a computer. Because if there is some kind of message up on screen and it is an active window, space bar often ends up actually interacting with the ok or cancel button on that message / popup.
That has screwed me over a number of times. Most of the time, it's start installing software, monitor went to sleep, hit spacebar. Oh crap I agreed to the "free trial" and "browser extension." Then uninstall said extension and disable the bloody trial.
I once had a lady come into Walmart. She wanted to replace her year and a half old phone. I asked her what's wrong with it? She told me that a year ago(from the date that she came to Walmart) it stopped accessing the internet. 6 months after that it stopped taking phone calls at all. And last week it stopped receiving text. I asked if I could see her phone. I checked the awake time and it was legit at 99:99:99. She had NEVER turned her phone off... Ever... I took the battery out for ten seconds. Turned it back on. It worked like new. I had at least one customer like this a week.
Why should he? Maybe I don't understand something but it's about shitty software that requires reboots caused by memory leaks or other shit, it's not about "dumb" customers that hadn't even told to do like that. And from her possible previous experience of keyboard phones that may make no sense.
@@ИванОмельченко-б7в Good point about memory leaks and crap software. I guess that is why most modern smart phones have a "garbage and memory and stale cache clear" app. I think many lazy or inexperienced developers just want to push out their apps too quickly to make money, without giving much thought to cleanup code.
My favourite idiot IT guy story... I get a call from a customer who wants me to come out and fix their microfilm reader printer which was 'dead'. I ask the obvious questions like... "Are you sure it's plugged in?" and "have you checked the 'doors' are all shut?" and I get the usual "Yes, yes of course I have!" so off I go forty miles down the road to have a look. When I get there the machine has been moved from its old position in the office to the server room and there it was not plugged in. There was one double socket in the room with the server plugged in one hole and an electric kettle plugged into the other. "There... It's not plugged in." says I... "I'm afraid you're still going to have to pay my call out fee and minimum labour charge so if you'd just sign here please..." So the guy signs and then reaches down and pulls not the plug on the kettle but the plug leading to the server... The one next to the sign saying in big red letters "DO NOT SWITCH OFF!" and plugs in the reader printer. This gibbering moron was their IT department. As for why there was an electric kettle in a server room... I don't know either.
It's a bit worse than that, actually. Common sense used to be common, because we used to teach it. It's based on curiosity and logic, the latter of which was a subject in the trivium. The Socialists had it thrown out, apparently thinking nothing bad would result from removing it.
I remember a little personal story: I called my ISP to notify them my connection was in trouble, giving them infos like bandwidth and ping. The "IT expert" on the phone cluelessly asked me "What's a ping?" I hanged up...
The US education system (ours too really, but the US especialy) is geared towards teaching people the answers to the tests, not how to come up with the answers for themselves.
TheAnon03 i am in computer science school and alot of basic stuff is completely missing and only way to learn that is either fucking googling it yourself or going to colege
that really depends on the teacher but for the most part that's true. I've had teachers where (college mainly) the answer was worth only 1/7 from the total score
TheAnon03 I had a college professor for a final exam give us a list of 10 questions and we had to pick 4 for our exam (3 days before the exam). So I picked my 4, went to the college library to find a book to study it and guess what... the exact questions WITH THE ANSWERS were in that text book. Aced it 100% and got called out on it I said the answers and questions were freely available. There’s nothing he could do, same for the school.
When I was in high school my class went to a computer lab to work on a project. Legend says that there was a computer that didn't work for years. I turned it on and it beeped a few times. I searched up the error code for that computer and it was the ram. I open it, take out the ram, put it back in and turn it on. It worked. Apparently my school is supposed to have some IT guys that fix these things, but obviously they are too busy doing other things for years to fix a computer for 2 mins.
I Google my way through life and end up knowing how to do not just anything I'm required to, but even things I will never need to know. I'm a photographer but I know the steps to make a sink out of a rock. Hell I've watched Primative Technology because absorbing information is interesting and fun. I would hate myself if I became incompetent.
yeah I feel ya.... I hate feeling incompetent. im a mechanic right now even ive never actually work on many thing besides tiny things, making 2 models but I try to catch up as much as I can. I got a pretty good eye for diagnostics however, especially electricity, hydraulics and computers
Garry Reyom Indeed. In the age of Google there is no such thing as "don't know", there is a tutorial or a manual for just about anything man or even alien-made (lol). Problem is people can't be arsed. When i don't know something, a quick online search will educate me, be it a new standard for a lightbulb or latest developments in string theory.
You know you work with a moron, if you see him having "one click" and "Jump mouse to default button" enabled at the same time. Now imagine, you come to him, not knowing he has this enabled. You put your USB drive in and it fails to detect the volume right at the moment you double-click the drive. What you end up is: You click the drive at the first click, get an error message and the fucking mouse cursor snaps to the button saying "FORMAT" and this happens in the same time span of a double click around ~240ms
Google. The one, real, IT skill that I use most is knowing how to manipulate search terms to find, utilize, and continue utilizing the information I need. When something changes? You find the next person that knows what they're doing or someone with similar issues and you figure it out. Then you JUST. KEEP. DOING. THAT.
Amen. I keep doing that and people are in awe of my "amazing IT skills" and keep asking me to fix their shit even though I know any person could go online, read and fix stuff alone.. Its actually annoying how lazy people have become.
@@P07AT0 Exactly, whenever someone is describing a problem they're having with let's say a phone or something I always ask "Did you Google it or maybe tried going into settings?" Most of the time the answer is no, why people do that? And whats even worse is that this applies to many other things, not only IT related stuff, "hey what's the phone of that store?" Just google it. "Hey what does this word mean?" Fucking google it.
it's just that not anyone can have the ability to "do searches online", even in these days, idky but it's just like that, many people ask me to fix their stuff and I just tell them to search for the damn keywords when I don't have time, it works most of the time
Anybody who shows up without a laptop, login information, the ability to check their email on their phone, or the common sense to plug in a VGA cable does not deserve to be called a "specialist"
Hahaha, yes, I run a small IT support company for over 10 years now and I see this all the time. So called "specialists" for specific business software are the worst. Those people literally can't plug a cable in, create an user account, make a network share or whatever. The only thing they can is click "Next" in the installer of their software. I regularly get calls where business owners ask me if I could come and hold hands with the "specialist" from the company they bought their expensive business software from because the guy refuses to do anything other on their computers than click "Next" in his installer... they usually claim that it's company policy and that they don't want to be responsible for anything. Sad thing is: They ACTUALLY f*ck up the customers computer when you convince them to do any actual work. So don't do this, even if it seems impossible to you that one could f*ck up in such a situation! A while ago I had a case where some business software guy managed to render all four computers in a small architecture firm useless, when he tried to create a network share for his software (the company had no server at that time). I still don't really know how he did it, but after his attempts, you couldn't login on any account on any of those computers. Best thing was: After shutting down the whole company he left because he had to go to the next customer... so they made an emergency call to me, to restore the functionality of their system... Of course, a lot of the poeple in IT are not only incompetent but also fraudulent. Every few weeks I'm confronted with customers that have been massively lied to and/or overcharged by other IT specialists. One guy in my area systematically sells computer systems to (mostly elder) private persons that are worth 1000 - 2000$ and charges them 5000 - 6000$. And that's just one example of a hundred. Truth ist: Knowing nothing and clicking "next" in an installer or ripping people off can bring you much more money in tech than actually knowing what you are doing. In the end it's the fair and competent guys like us that hear the wailing of the ripped-off customers and in the end are even asked for a discount since the customers have already wasted all their money on the idiots and freudsters.
My teacher from that scam NIT school I went to ripped me off by building a PC where the mobo wasnt mounted correctly and shorted out. I seem to recall he shut it off before POST was done when I went to pick it up.
One thing Louis has made me realize is that stopping saying, "I don't know," and replacing it by, "How, what etc." definitely gets you far. Instead of defaulting to ask others, you become independent.
When I reinstalled Windows 10 on my laptop, my roommate asked me if I had a "OS installation course". The best part, he's doing a course in Computer Science Engineering.
Tomáš Kasl No, we are not taught to install an OS maybe because it would take a lot of time as most of the Universities do not have projectors in every classroom and the teachers would have to explain it using chalk and blackboard. Here are 2 more incidents I remember: Once a guy came to me saying that his laptop is running slow just after 2 days of purchase. Reason? 2gb RAM running Windows 10 x64. My relative wanted to buy a PC (including monitor, keyboard, speakers, mouse and the usual stuff like antivirus) for his son, so he asked me how much could it cost. I told him it will cost a minimum $350-$500 which was very expensive for him. Clearly annoyed, he bought a "New" PC from his friend for $200. Later when I visited them I checked the specifications. It had celeron, 2gb DDR2 RAM, 80gb HDD, windows XP. They all sound like they are made up. But the cringe is real. Sorry for the long comment.
Millionaire business owner runs Windows server 2006 on a ten year old PC with 2GB of RAM ( well you could log into it, and it somehow manged to serve files, but backups always failed, which they didn't seem concerned about, it did not even have resources to update virus signatures) When I tried to explain these things to him, and mentioned that the server that runs his WHOLE BUSINESS is due to fail completely, he blew me off. What he was concerned about was that his ten year old laptop with its ten year old battery wouldn't hold a charge. Then calls me up on a Friday at 5pm saying his server is down (No shit Sherlock) and expected me to come out immediately and fix it for $25 an hour! And that was the end of that business relationship. Good luck with Geek Squad.
+99MHz of Gaming I had the same issue, i'm an electronics engineer, self taught in IT, I ran my own IT business until I couldn't handle the stress of dealing with stupid customers. I applied to work at a local school, doing their IT, I would have been working with an old friend of mine, but they gave the job to some graduate in computer science WHO on their first day couldn't even do a clean install of Windows AND jammed a USB mouse into a parallel printer port (how is that even possible?). Want a job in IT? get a worthless degree and talk a lot of BS.
Or a person living in a XXI century. Reminds me of a scene from IT Crowd when Roy asks someone on the phone "You do know how a button works? (...) Excuse me, are you from the past?"
PREACH! I'm in the Navy and we have specific ratings (job specialties). I'm technically an Electronics Technician, an ET. But I've started referring to myself as Everything Tech, because I am so tired of lazy people saying "I'm not trained to do that" or "that's not my job". I was trained to repair electronics, mostly radios and radar. But I'm currently working as a system admin, because that is what I need to be able to do right now. I have no mechanic experience, but I've taken apart and repaired the diesel engine in a HMMV because no one else could be bothered to fix it and I needed it to run. I learned to repair generators and HVAC systems because we didn't have anyone "qualified" at the time. I learned to pick locks because no one in the military seems to be able to keep track of a set of keys for more than a few days. We live in a time when the information you need to learn almost ANYTHING is available nearly instantly anywhere you go. Fuck the specialist attitude. Love your videos. Tons of good stuff. Keep it up!
Hi Louis. Sometimes so called "safety legislation" blocks your path in the most annoying way. My central heating boiler failed (no ignition) and I quickly realized that the control board was at fault since it was one of my own designs from a few years back. I could quickly diagnose the fault down to a faulty diode (the one fitted was not to my spec) but I could not remove the board to repair it without breaking the security seal. No choice but to call in the gas board "qualified" technician who in fairness quickly diagnosed a faulty control board and quoted me €400 plus labour. we sold these to the manufacturer for €12.49 plus the fact that I knew it only needed a 5 cent diode. Luckily being a semi state body the obligatory "lunch time" arrived and the guy bade me farewell, promising to be back shortly. Well guess what, he left the board on the worktop and I seized the opportunity to replace the diode. After returning from his lunch some 2 hours later I suggested he try the board again just in case it was merely a bad connection. He agreed and lo and behold everything was perfect. So there you have it I was not "qualified" to repair my own design
Very true. At a metalworking complex I used to work at I witnessed the CEO's son high on ego try to fix a CNC machine himself only for him to touch the wrong things and electrocute himself to death.
@Undefined Lastname Yeah, let's allow people to DIY the wiring in their apartments. It's not like there are other people who would be harmed by a fire. The truth is that usually, when a person does a stupid thing, it harms the people around him or her as well.
Advice for KVMs, just in case some idiot leaves a "Do you want to format this computer and sell your soul to Satan" dialog box on, use control, shift, or caps lock (rather than spacebar) as your default resume key.
I usually use servers with builtin remote management and KVM. I never bother with consumer grade hw and external KVM facility. Especially if even cheaper servers are equipped or can be optionally equipped with it those days. WIth such system you can even flash bios and reinstall os remotely from scratch.
I worked for a server maintenance company and one of my customers was a group of hospitals. One hospital had a domain controller that was "down". I got a call for it at midnight. Local support didn't know what to do. I go to my office, grab some possible parts, head over to the hospital and see nothing on the screen. Hitting a key did nothing, KVM connected. I got a monitor and keyboard, made a quick crash cart, and hooked it up and see something on the screen: "the error log is full. Press F1 to continue". I clear the error log, server boots in to windows, domain controller is back online. This did help prove that the vendor didn't configure redundancy properly, but the local support didn't think to plug in a monitor and see what was going on bc technically a monitor was already plugged in. So in short, hitting F1 to continue helped me get a job there a few years later, which helped them as well. 11 years later, I'm still here.
I loved every minute of this rant. I've dealt with vendors like this who have no clue what they're doing with anything outside their very specific area and it's frustrating to all hell.
Tbh I knew how to plug in a VGA monitor by the time I was like 5. Blue plug goes to blue plug; power goes to the wall. It's really not that complicated
@Carl Matthew Hamilton - CHTSI Fair enough, but if you plug it in and the plug fits, but you still don't get a signal, then you know your problem isn't the type of connector, and is more likely the physical integrity of said connector. It's a basic troubleshooting process.
Hell, I remember before I knew things about computers that I wanted to fix an issue my first one had initially, where kicking it would make it reboot or die. I opened it not knowing what to expect, but giving no fucks about it being more broken afterwards, and I found one plug backed out quite a bit. I put 2 and 2 together, thinking that my Genesis controller would not work correctly if the plug weren't inserted all the way, and pushed in the plug of that fat ass ribbon cable. No more stalls and crashes from small amounts of shock. Lesson: Ride a tire swing, and you'll always go back to where you started. Ride a bike and you can go wherever the fuck you please.
When you want something done, do it yourself. Don't know how to do it? Figure it out, we have google. And if you are still having trouble, use your brain and try harder. Anyone can fix a computer if they try and take the time.
just watched this. i totally hear ya. i nearly blew my stack when the IT tech defined Chrome as a virus because he didn't know how to set default programs.
2001 I wasnt sure how to add a network card to my PC and had to have a friend show me. Today I am the go-to IT guy, and know tonnes more than that friend.
While this rant is hilarious, the fact that we have IT specialists wandering out there who don't know how to even plug in a monitor/keyboard disturbs me greatly.
This reminds me of when I was buying a CPU. I was literally forced to start teaching someone who is selling these stuff about cores, socket and generations of CPU.
This is one of my favorite videos that you have released. I learned early on that learning how to fix anything that I can figure out was useful and needed. I also had an electronics instructor that impressed into us that the guy that can figure out how things work and fix it will always be more needed and secure in his job than the guy who only knows how to swap a part. In my life I have only been unemployed one time that lasted more than a few days, and with only a tech school certificate in electronics, I work at a relatively high level within my organization.
The thing is accountability. Sometimes being nice and helping someone fires back. If you touch something you own it. If for some reason that thing you touched and did something as simple as plugging a monitor fails, people will ask who touched it. And you will be responsible. Even if what you did has absolutely nothing to do with the problem they will still blame you.
I guarantee you that most of these IT specialists have certifications up the ying yang. Years ago I was working Server 2000 via command (cacls no less) and in walks the next latest and greatest to tell me he has all the microsoft certs. As he is watching me work, he says "what is that?" Hmmm, it's the command line. He says it again, "what is that?"
That's not entirely true. I had at one time some Cisco certifications. I worked hard to get them. You didn't get them by showing up, you got them by passing the certification test.
Microsoft specialists are so fucking retarded. Whenever you ask a question on microsoft's website with those "specialists" , they always give some of the dumbest answers to questions about using Windows. Some thinking Windows 7 and windows XP are the same thing, some telling you that you need to use the goddamn CMD just to access the control panel which already has a shortcut on the start button, and some saying your PC is not good enough to run new microsoft software when you have an i7 with 8GB of ram with a 400 dollar GPU, and some saying that an important windows process in the taskmanager is a virus, this is so ridiculous, seriously.
Wouldn't do that if I were you. Before you know, you'll be running around "fixing" everyone's computer after they installed the latest malware again. Oh, and if ever you find yourself becoming a software developer: don't be like me and actually tell people when they ask... Instead, tell 'em you're a teamlead, or in middle management or something. Not software developer, not even accountant! Pick something with absolutely zero real-world applicable skills. It's the only way to protect your gaming time. ;)
Just tell them you work at denny's and you got told off last week about giving discounts or having visitors so don't bother asking or coming in...also if you have a company car with the logo splattered all over it, just tell them you bought it super cheap because of the branding and you plan on getting it repainted soon. If you have to answer your phone with the business's name and standard greeting, just tell them you're helping a friend. If you have to wear a uniform with the business logo, just tell them [Business Name] makes some really great shirts, and then talk about how stain resistant it is or some shit. If they get interested in your miracle shirt and ask where they can get one, just tell them you got it in another country that time you were out on uh denny's....er..related...uh... Fuck it, just tell them you fudged your references, embellished your resume, and you have no idea what you're doing at your job. *Bonus points if it's true*
Ricky9111999 No no no no no. If you can plug in monitor you're not an IT specialist. You're a god amongst men. One time I successfully installed Google Chrome and I can proudly call myself a level 3 IT guy. I'm pretty sure that to master monitor installation you have to be at least a level 70 IT guy, or a level 8 Wizard.
I must be a Grandmaster IT Specialist and a Plumber. I built my whole machine, and liquid cooled it with a 560 mm radiator, 1080 SLI, and it's on a utility cart so I can setup my HTC Vive in any room I want. What the fuck with the "cannot plug a cable in for a 10,000 ~ 20,000 dollar job"? You could have a professional killer do a hit job for that money, and see a picture of a dead body. =w=
Thank you for this Louis. I've been a Dev for 18 years and I am not the brightest knife in the box by any means. What I can do is think, step back and look at the big pic, actually deal with people, understand what they need/want vs what they say, be polite and professional despite my 'feelings' toward them and get the job done despite roadblocks. I tell my kids all the time that they will NEVER have to worry about having a job ever if you do a couple things. Be real during an interview, be calm, think, treat people nice, admit when you don't know something then go figure it out, follow up with people a week after a fix, show people you care and if you do those things better than the actual work you do (to a point) you will be loved and needed thus retaining a job. UGH!! Great vids Louis!
Curiousity is what made technology, it's something every person is born with. What happened with curiousity these days? Really happened: *sees an 'ok' button, the only clickable thing on screen. "what should i do?" i heard a customer asking....
I will say something too. This video, reminded me how idiotic some computer service stores can be ... . One of my stories, that above statement is correct: Once, someone goes to store, says that DVD-burner is not working and they keept computer for 3 days and what do you think, what did they say? "Sorry, your DVD-burner died, you need another one". Ok then costumer agreed and they added new burner in. They left old one as agreed. After one week, that person came to me, and said, that old's DVD-burner light still turns on and if I can help him. I said ofcourse. When I opened computer case, IDE and power cable are still connected to a old burner. Just for kicks, I only pulled out both connectors and connected them back, turned computer on and DVD-burner was working like a charm. So ... what do you think about this situation? There was been even easier and harder things, where "technicians" done theirs "great" work. I too do not have college, just high school, almost all things I know, I learned by my self. And even not, that I am not programing websites and apps for Android, because of my health issues. I can still beat manny techs by using logic and research, while is not too complex. I just hate those people, that calls themself "technician"... so anyone wants to share your story? By the way, Louis, great video =)
I experienced what you said first hand. I attended graduate school in the US. One day, when I was doing my thesis, I messed around with my glasses because one of the legs was wobbly. The tiny screw came off and I couldn't put it back. I rushed to the nearest optician which was in a mall. There was a long line and the guy at the front desk told me repair would cost me $20+. I couldn't wait so I went to a sunglasses shop in the same mall. The first thing the guy at the shop said when I show him my glasses was "Are those correction glasses? ... Wow... I'm not suppose to touch those. It will get me into trouble." I asked him very nicely and told him that I have a paper to finish and he finally agreed to fix my glasses. Sqink sqink sqink... took him 2 seconds. Now I carry a mini-screwdriver wherever I go just in case. I like your videos and I think you are a damn smart person. People should realize that a certificate/degree/education doesn't make you smart, just perhaps more of a bigot. Come on America! Where's that can-do spirit?
+Dell0304 Impressive stupidity isn't it, just imagine if they had to build a a server let alone mess with anything ancient. People my age are clueless about ancient things like XT/AT era machines that businesses use for industrial use ect.
The sad part is, I'm 18 and I own at least one AT machine, and I know how it works. Computers aren't rocket science. Like Louis said, it's not so much about your certs or anything, it's about having some common sense.
+Dell0304 Probably one of those idiots that got into IT because he thought it paid well, while having zero interest or experience in the field. Most people who are actually interested in IT, build their own PCs, so they know how to plug in a goddamn monitor and much more.
+MrKillswitch88 exactly, I will love to see them trying to setup a multi-io card with the jumpers, or deal with a computone multiport hehe, is so easy now...
I completely understand your frustration. Been in the industry for nearly 25 years and I can't think of a single time when I said "I don't know" without immediately following it with "but I'll figure it out." That's why people who were my boss when I started now work under me. Specializing in one area is great but you need to at least have a basic understanding of all surrounding technologies if you want to be truly successful.
Got here by randomly looking at one of Linus' videos, watched a few of the videos on the channel, as an 18 year IT pro, also no college degree myself, I can say, you are the real deal, if I were cross country, your the type of individual I'd want to work with. To the point and with common sense.
Yeah there was an "IT specialist" at my school... She had a job to restrict students from going to some sites, from installing applications and so on. So she installed the Microsoft parent or whatever it is called on all computers and called it a day... My brother after a week showed her 3 ways of going around that software. He was a student too BTW...
Sharded Gem lol that's weak, my school uses fortiguard which on its own a vpn should make quick work of. But i think they bundled it with a Vpn blocker. It's a pain in the ass, fortiguard is wicked intrusive. It's just cancer.
Students are like prisoners. They have nothing but time and motivation to figure a way around controls. Most School IT people are union and do their best to avoid doing actual work.
If I call myself an IT specialist can I...please? Actually, I now never tell people I know about computers, because they expect me to (1) be magically expert in every electronic device ever invented and (2) fix every IT problem instantly, permanently and for free. Oh, and (3) take the blame for their breaking my fixes. So now I have time for the finer things in life. Like, for instance....
8 Becacause these words are *_The Words of Power,_* and they will help you. They will help you when the servers die, the backups are either erroring or fried, along with your job, and you have five criticals still to do within the hour.
From 10:05 and on, YOUR REAL LIFE SCHOOL LESSON BEGINS. Pay attention and bookmark it to listen to it until you can recite it like the Pledge of Allegiance. Unlike Louis, I did get my A+ Certification and wanted to certify on other things and had this notion that I couldn't touch anything else that I wasn't certified on. Imagine, I even have an Associates degree in Audio Recording. I relate to Louis so much because we've been involved in things quite similar. Even his name is like mine. He's got to be my brother from another mother! HERE'S MY STORY: I worked from 2001 to 2005 for a big company in Illinois that did upgrades for customer orders making $9/hour. Each day that passed I asked myself when I was going to leave this dump hole. In order to start making a "positive change" in my mind I decided to go back to school and study Management and go to school after work. I didn't planned to have the company pay for tuition but they did and they made it easy. To make the story short, 2 weeks before I had finished my management degree to go from the warehouse into an office environment , I went upstairs to get coffee from the "big shots" coffee maker because they had better coffee then us poor technicians, so I went there and stopped, had a sip of my coffee and looked at the cubicles and said to myself: "this is my new working environment, I will be doing what they're doing and will be making more money." I felt like the guy from Coming to America that said: See I'm washing lettuce, soon I'll be on fries, then grill and about two years assistant manager and that's where the big bucks start rolling in. SO GUESS WHAT I DID? I packed my things and left the company within 3 weeks after that trip upstairs. The mentality I was creating during those times were similar to what Louis explains here from 10:05 on. I was feeling that I could do this on my own and make my own money. I knew by experience that people needed me to do things they didn't want to do because they couldn't do it even if I explained it to them. Also the biggest influencer and motivator was that Geek Squad was ripping people off and I could fix their computers for the fraction of that price. So I decided to break my agreement with the company of NOT opening shop on them. I was smart. I kept it low key and was coming out of my basement and visiting customers like an old fashion doctor that takes home calls. It became a very successful entreprise for me at a moment when the economy in 2008 was struggling. This is when I realized that I could do anything I put my actions into. Today I am learning Python and other languages. I love programming more than fixing computers. There's an underserved market in the Spanish-speaking communities in the field of Education. I'm about to make gadgets, games and other programs for this community and I can do it because anyone can if you really want to. Learn by trial and error, learn with books, learn by doing and learn from youtube. People like Louis serve almost 3/4 of a million subscribers. You are getting this content for free. You are learning real life experience with no BS attached to it. AND I LEAVE YOU WITH THIS: Put his videos up in your workbench while you work on your systems and get inspiration my friends.
Education doesn't necessarily make you smart. I would dissagree and definitely say you are smart because you took your time and sit down, lokk around and understand the world better. Something that is very important nowadays.
+Ni De Education alone doesn't make you smart. You can recite the OSI layer and give out all network topology but if you can't apply that knowledge to something practical then you are just as useful as paperweight.
+Ni De Education is what other people do to you, learning is what you do to yourserf. - Joi Lto And as a great freaking example i have a buddy in my IT course who does not know how to boot windows from usb even after watching and reading how to change bios setting. Yes education is important but if the person is not using it well then where is the problem in the persons actions or education ... you get the point
I agree, I think you are being modest, Louis. Just because you find some of these things easy it doesn't mean that most do. I found certain things easy to troubleshoot and solve that my fellow students(some studying Computer Science like me) just could not understand and this was at a top University and involved Windows troubleshooting, so not very hard. From one University drop out(health reasons) to another I think you've done extremely well.
I can't stop watching your videos and that is saying something because I only watch 1-7 videos usually on average TH-cam channels I like. Much respect to you, mate
You just got a new subscriber. One of my life motto's "A human made it, and human can fix it". As you say I don't have certification, but you can't learn at school why "smps phone charger isn't charging, and cables are good". We have natural curiousness that has disappeared, that's why some people pay's someone else to change light bulb. 15 yrs i'm into IT and consumer electronics. but when i got my first PC, that was Pentium II when I was 18th yrs old, Didn't know what to do next when I powered IT up, now I am 33yrs old, IT system engineer without any certification and IT school background . Rest is history ....
Not if you've worked in the IT field in the last five years. The bar for being called a specialist is so low that it's actually fairly common to hear stupid shit like this.
+Alex Fernandez I've worked in IT for 2 years. embedded C++ developer. All of our contractors have been exceptional and professional. I wonder what she was a specialist in...
Louis, I would agree. It' a weird mindset. I run into it sometimes over the years and I have been working in IT since 1997. I used to work at a VAR and have these people come in to do software installs or hardware installs and have no clue about how any other technology which is also part of their field works. They fear change, don't have common sense or fear learning something new. I am pretty self-taught as well. You have to be able to learn these things and not be afraid of it.
Louis I think you're my IT spirit animal. I've made a successful IT career out of refusing to say that I don't know how to do something. My daily work is as a systems analyst but I'm comfortable in a room filled with DBAs, server admins, programmers, electrical engineers, etc. If there's anything that angers me more about "IT professionals," it's the ones that complain about a lack of training. Learn it your fucking self! IT requires a very high degree of autonomy and critical thinking. A lot of people in IT LIKE the IDEA of working in IT, but they hate the idea of putting in the WORK to learn the systems that they will be managing ALL THE WAY DOWN TO THE CHIPS AND BITS. It's good for me, in a way, because I stand out, but it's also extremely frustrating to work alongside some people who couldn't care less about the inner workings of our systems, and how they can leverage that knowledge to get the most out of them. Great video, thanks for sharing!
Correct me if I'm wrong, but from what I remember I was told that the true definition of stupidity is the refusal or inability to learn. The woman described in this story is a US. marine with only 2 days training and a pair of socks running full tilt into a minefield.
Quite a few years ago, I was between jobs and was working part-time at a McD's on the late night shift. One night our "district IT person" to install new software. She didn't know how to open the CD-ROM drive. Seriously. I had to open the drive for her. I asked how she got the job and it was a "reward" for having been a good store manager. The truly sad thing is that I had applied for that position but I wasn't considered qualified even though I had spent twenty years as a programmer and had done network installs and configurations during that time as well. Sadly, too often in the tech world, you don't have to know much to get a job but knowing too much can keep you from getting a job.
Every single tech in the business SHOULD be an extremely good Google searcher. About half the problems I run across I've never seen before and it takes X amount of minutes (depending on the problem) to find and fix it. You have the entire collection of human experience and knowledge in the palm of your hands. Use it.
I had that here in the UK. Well known Hotel chain had their booking system guys in, they would not patch a network cable from the network switch to the patch panel to make their port on the wall live. I had to drive an hour to do it for them...
The bit about the KVM reminded me of one of the places I worked at, I was never big, all I did was the easy stuff, build custom pcs, fix virus ridden pcs, install new computers etc... But I was the only person in our establishment who did this with the exception of an intern who worked for two hours every Thursday. I too was only an intern though, but not exactly, I was placed there by my countrys version of the unemployment office as part of "gain work experience" program. So I only worked from 9am to 2pm instead of the usual 9 to 5. Any way, after being there for a couple of months I felt that my setup was horribly inneficient, I had a desk with 2 monitors on it and a wall with roughly 100 computers stockpiled for various jobs I was supposed to perform, with only 2 monitors I could only have 2 computers up at a time and yeah, it was no fun at all. I, at my own expense, ordered a KVM switch, and started having 5 computers going at a time instead of 2, in just a week I had managed to clear out half of the backlogged computers and was on good track to clear out our entire backlog. Since my output was higher than the influx of new jobs. But then I arrived at work one day and the KVM switch was gone, my boss had sold it, didn't even give me back the money I had spent on it. I convinced him to at least order a replacement KVM switch, but literally the day after it arrived, he sold that one too and told me no more KVM switches, he don't like them. As a result, our backlog started growing again and a few months later my time there ended, they hired a replacement for the position I was holding while I was there about a week after my time ended, and funnily enough, it was someone I knew, and I happen to know that he quit because he wasn't allowed to improve the system with a KVM switch for the exact same reason. I never did get reimbursed for that KVM switch...
I don't really know much of IT (except for stuff I need to know in order to hook my things up and keep my house WiFi running), but man that's incredibly painful to read.
I was doing some computer work in a dental office reception and between the two reception computers there was a printer. It was physically connect to one of the computers via USB cable. But the lady using the other computer said she cannot print to that printer. I asked why and she said their previous IT guy said it's not possible. So I say "That's odd. Are you sure?" She says "Definitely! He swore it's not possible" Every time she printed something (which was MANY times a day) she had to get up and go to the other side of the room where there was a large networked laser printer/fax. So I'm thinking of different scenarios in my head as to what weird incompatibilities could cause this anomaly because both computers had the same OS and were networked, etc. This wasn't what I was there to fix, but I felt bad for her because in the hour I was there she must have got up 10 times to go to that other printer while there was one sitting beside her that her workmate was printing to. So I asked if she minded if I try something and she agreed reluctantly thinking I was wasting my time. I shared the printer on her workmates computer then found it on the network from hers and connected to it. Ran a test print and boom...the thing start printing LOL She nearly fell off her feet with shock. She said "I can't believe it! You must be a genius. That other guy SWORE to me me that it was impossible!! What did you do??" I said "I did nothing unusual. I'm not a genius either. I'm can't really be sure why he would say it would not work...worked for me first try....maybe ask him" LOL
Intressteing video, i live and work in Sweden as an IT Technician, at my company where i work we belive as long as you can't do basic I/0 testing or diagnostics on a computer or a setup, you shouldnt be working with IT. To be fair, Louis got a great point, its embaressing that this dude "could" not hook up a VGA monitor to a server, even if it runs a KVM Switch, doesnt matter, a KVM switch isnt something new. Really sad that someone uses a title as "IT Specialist" when they cant do basic I/0 diagnostics on a setup, just so sad, brings dirt to the IT industry. Also, Louis, if you read this, I heard you are running multibale servers for different purposes, if I could give you a personal advice it would be to look into ESXI, to run your server virutally on 1 server, with more power, being able to power all youre 4 or 5 servers (or how many you got) in just one physical server. Sorry for my bad english, not my first lanugage, I try as well as I can. Love your videos, gives me the tech orgams when you fix all the messed up motherboards! Thank you!
Yo Louis, I had to send this video to a bunch of people who are in the "peers" in the IT space with me, because what you are describing here is exactly them. There is a mentality you need to survive and grow as a technologist and you work with people just as much as you work with technology. I couldn't articulate my frustrations with them as clear as you have in this video so i sent this to them so they can at least get a glimpse of what i'm talking about. Being in IT you need to constantly learn, and learn, and learn, I didn't know half the mountain of skills and shit i know now 3 years ago when i started in IT, now i'm building datacenters, integrating systems, building domains with AD,EXCH,SP, ticketing systems, NAS, Deploying sql clustered services across multiple cloud provider, . None of it i took "classes" for or got certifications on at the time, i just learned and went on to the next problem to solve then learned..then rinse and repeat. Thank you for posting this rant, even though its already 2 years old it is still going to be a relevant and accurate video today as it is 15 years ago and 50 years into the future. (unfortunately)
Oh man, this just opened up an old wound of mine. I was working at a tech house in the SF Bay in the early 2000s (right before the big tech crash there). They had hired some kid fresh out of college, and I was charged with getting him set up around the office. I got some hardware together for a desktop, put it all together, threw a copy of Windows at him and said, "let me know when you've got that installed." He responded with, "I don't know how to do that." I asked him what his major was in college, he said, "CIS".... A CIS major that couldn't install Windows...the most brain-dead OS install imaginable. I told him his folks needed to demand a refund on his education (but really he was just an idiot). The worst part? When the stock market crashed in late 2001, they laid me off and kept him. I suspect because he was boating buddies with one of the owners.
As an engineer, who was at a different time in my life an IT professional, thank you for exposing this. I ran into so many people that didn't even come close to knowing how to do their job.
Absolutely hilarious. I work for a small it consulting company, we do almost everything for small businesses... Dealing with third party software guys is almost always this fun. Specially for all our dental clients. And the support... My god the support. (To be fair some are better than others and even the worst one has that 1 guy who's actual gold)
I'm an idiot, but I can solve most simple computer issues because I know how to use google to find specific information, people ask me how to fix their stuff all the time, I feel like a google proxy at this point.
i couldn't agree more brother, I know EXACTLY what you're talking about and I'm an IT support specialist. Cannot tell you how many incompetent people I've met or worked for in the business that made me wonder how the F they even managed to tie their own shoes in the morning, it's pathetic. My main thing is networking and security for computers, but I used to do unlocks\jailbreaks for people for their shitty iphones, I change faucets and just learned to do full cleaning for PTAC AC units because I couldn't find a competent HVAC person to do it properly. Just like you, I grew up in Brooklyn but I wasn't born in US, so I'm not afraid to do new things and have the same confidence you have in my work when I work on computers. It's mind boggling how many people are clueless about technology and lack common sense but yet claim they work in "IT", I never understood how these people ever got their jobs to be making such wild claims like that when they can't even find the god damn shortcut to their desktop on their desktop. Love your channel, keep up the great work, it's very informative and helpful information that everyone can find something to take away for themselves.
Most important skill in IT is sadly the hardest to find. That skill is the ability to quickly learn and apply basic knowledge and even some more advance stuff. Technology changes all the time. How it works, what it looks like, and how it is implemented/integrated always shifting. Our job is to be able to adapt and shift with it, but not forget about the older stuff because they are still in play. But there is no way in hell any single person can know how to use everything piece of tech, how to fix, and/or understand how it all works then remember it all. Then try figuring out how to make the old work with the new, sometimes that requires a person that a specialized type of skill and understanding, like getting an Nintendo 64 to give HD output across an HDMI or DVI port and cable, but some not so much like getting a device that uses molex power connectors to be powered with modern computers by using a simple molex to sata adapter. Sadly, I know of many computer "techs" these days, that can't solve that last example, may even think it impossible. I would hate and love to see their heads explode when they learn of laser disc or MUSE-LD HiDef but then try to help people set them up with their computers.
LTT brought me here and I subbed and enjoy your videos but you are way too advanced with this tech stuff I only know the basics and even then I don't understand what you do, but I still enjoy it.
Learning comes with doing, if you've never done it, you don't know it and if you never will try it because you don't currently know it, you never will.
I swear Louis, every video of yours I see, in particular the ones like this where you put up pain points like this that i have dealt with for the past 20+ years of mixed IT work I have done, most of it walking into completely unfamiliar territory... It really makes me want to take the 4 hour drive into the "shitty" from the Catskills to buy you a beer. I may just have to drop by with a 6 pack next time I find myself in NYC. Keep it up, man. That being said, I am actually working on a new physical product and training course which I am planning on working with middle schools through colleges to teach basic IT literacy from the chip level up to systems and application development to try to curb this wave of high tech users who are completely fucking oblivious to how this stuff actually works. Maybe I'll ship you a proto board to do a build and review on, should you have the time (it is designed to be a kit).
and for the record, this is all as someone who is technically a high school dropout with a GED and no certifications... but decades of real world, hard earned knowledge and skills, who NEVER gave up on some project because "well gee, i don't know that..."
This was so fucking hilarious. First video I've ever seen of you and you are my new favorite sub because you really spoke to me as a fellow human being. I don't know if you read your insane amount of comments but I thought I would share why I am so happy to find your channel... I've always been considered bright, but my teachers thought never put in the ""effort" in school because I was really talkative and excited all the time. Catholic High school was no different, I scored a 29 cumulative on the ACT which could basically get me into any damn university I pleased. I started college fresh out of high school, but it didn't go according to the standard American narrative of "four years, get a career, get married start a family"... I've been a technology addict since my parents bought me a NES (with Duck hunt!) for my birthday and a music fanatic since I can remember, so with a group of college friends I started a DJ collective that was successful supporting mainstage EDM acts in the Midwest. Over my first three years in college I took a wide array of classes trying to find a niche, while spending more time on producing music and DJing than on homework. Throughout this time I developed a severe pharmaceutical opiate addiction that stemmed from an injury in my childhood , and eventually ended up using heroin instead because it was cheaper and more effective. So obviously I stopped going to school. I went to rehab and moved back home. After getting my footing again, I went to a technical college nearby and obtained an Associates Degree in Music engineering. I wasn't satisfied with just an associates so I decided to give University schooling another shot. I've been in the Computer Science program at my school for 2 years now, most of my old credits were worthless but I'm making good progress. However there is just something missing. I feel a void in my education, I have always, like you, thought I could learn things and figure them out on my own faster than sitting in a classroom. I just feel like the wheels turning but I am not going anywhere. I've been educating myself outside of school on technologies that are not being taught in the classroom. At this point I am 27 with 6 years clean from IV heroin that in all likelihood should have killed me, and I guess it just really brightened my outlook to hear you talk about your failures in school that way. You talk about problem solving and self-learning in a manner that really spoke to me on a profound level. It was just what I needed to hear, that someone so alike myself, with a breadth of interests and skills, who doesn't really fit the natural mold of a "good student" can really succeed in this world if they have the problem solving and motivation to keep themselves educated on a wide breadth of topics. Thanks again for your message even though it was not the main purpose of what you were relaying in the video, it happened to mean something to me!
Preaching to the choir, Louis. My blood pressure gets high talking to those people. My blood pressure gets even high thinking of those people. Now that I'm getting older, I have absolutely no patience with these people anymore.
That wasn't an IT specialist... that was a worker drone that was hired to push a few buttons and has no actual clue how any of it works. Guarantee if anything went wrong during install they wouldn't have the first clue where to begin trying to correct the issue.
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Louis Rossmann I try to be in all tech but I’m only human lol, thanks for this message.
Louis Rossmann oh my gosh!!! How do they don’t know how to do this? I’m learning this in high school. It is easy. You don’t need to be smart to do your job correctly.
DowskiVision You cant be serious? Nearly everyone is totally fucking useless across the board, its not gender specific in any capacity. In fact all the women in tech I know are on average better than their male counterparts because they flat have to be because of this sort of bullshit attitude.
And no if this was a dude I imagine it would have been exactly the same because its still one of your customers and you arent helping the random dickhead company you are helping your customer. Also you are still getting paid for it.
In my experience people often panic in contact with problems simply because they treat it as "demon box" that do things. And even when given instructions step by step in simple words they "indoctrinated" them self that it is black magic so much that they are simply afraid to do anything. For them risk of breaking it even more is much bigger in their heads than prize of solving problem on their own. So they prefer "specialist". And I get that. I sometimes call such help too even when I'm capable of trying to solve it in other situations. Like bike repairs. I could probably learn how to do that my self.
And mentioned case seems to me like becoming "IT specialist" cause there is good cash in it so "why not". And this way You my get person that does that "one thing" well just because it is only thing he/she knows and understands. So as long as all goes according to plan that person can do job well. Outside script there is panic mode. They are not out of passion in this business. Like not every driver is car mechanic or race fan. They where thought bare minimum to fulfil this task of installing and configuring app and there ends their knowledge. And that's probably bad in my opinion but more cause I don't see how you can like Your job this way. But in other hand we don't always get that opportunity to be able to pick job that we like.
I am better ms access developer than my IT friend when I am just a self taught learner. He doesn't even know how to use a combo box.
I took a 2 year course on plugging in VGA and I am now fully certified to plug in VGA screens. How could you expect me to plug in an HDMI cable? You should've hired an HDMI specialist for that part of the job, duh.
When are you doing the course for HDMI though?
@@hoseinqadam Well, I started now actually. The lockdown gives me time to go through the material myself. I hope to be certified by the end of the year.
how on earth people exist that cannot plug in VGA they have manuals for it. My friend who never used a computer before in his life is capable of finding the VGA and plugging it in because thats how easy it is to use. US education system must be in the drain if IT specialist means you cannot plug in the VGA
@@trollwarlord2967 r/whooooosshhh
@@RObert-ns3nx thats not an r/woosh moment lmao he actually doesn't know VGA port
edit a guy posted something before and deleted his comment
“Common sense” isn’t a gift, it’s a curse because you have to endure all the people who lack it.
You're preaching my gospel, friend.
common sense is overrated. to the IT specialist, it is common sense.
golden kid....straight gold
it's 60% gift 40% curse
@Nonsense Manjaro delete sys32
"I don't know how to do that!"
Do you have an internet connection?
"Yeah why?"
You have access to the collective knowledge of all humanity. Good luck!
I used google so often
'No no I left my laptop in my hotel room'
"What about your mobile phone?"
'You can access the internet on mobile-phones!?'
Boiiiiiiiii. Lost count of how many times I've solved coworkers problems with just google :p
@@juannicolascamelogarzon3947 it seems that you have to have certain skills to Google too. It's true!
Thats what i told my sister when she called and asked how to change a bad EGR on her car.. "Google it"
I'm not the smartest guy on the block but my "can do" attitude definitely gets me farther than an
"I can't" mentality.
I think Alexander the great said something along the lines of : Nothing is impossible for he who tries
"Can do!" "I'll learn!"
The best mentality is
I can't but i do it anyway,with google, blessed be google with all my personal information.
" Can't YET" is the best mentality
Not to be rude but hey, use shift or ctrl instead of spacebar to wake up a computer. Because if there is some kind of message up on screen and it is an active window, space bar often ends up actually interacting with the ok or cancel button on that message / popup.
+Dayaa Mar Sana good point.
Thank you, keep being awesome! Excellent videos too.
That has screwed me over a number of times. Most of the time, it's start installing software, monitor went to sleep, hit spacebar. Oh crap I agreed to the "free trial" and "browser extension." Then uninstall said extension and disable the bloody trial.
Good point.
Well, true. But I prefer one finger quick touch on any ARROW key... done.
I once had a lady come into Walmart. She wanted to replace her year and a half old phone. I asked her what's wrong with it? She told me that a year ago(from the date that she came to Walmart) it stopped accessing the internet. 6 months after that it stopped taking phone calls at all. And last week it stopped receiving text. I asked if I could see her phone. I checked the awake time and it was legit at 99:99:99.
She had NEVER turned her phone off... Ever... I took the battery out for ten seconds. Turned it back on. It worked like new. I had at least one customer like this a week.
Why should he? Maybe I don't understand something but it's about shitty software that requires reboots caused by memory leaks or other shit, it's not about "dumb" customers that hadn't even told to do like that. And from her possible previous experience of keyboard phones that may make no sense.
@@ИванОмельченко-б7в all computers need to be turned off every now and again.
@@ИванОмельченко-б7в Good point about memory leaks and crap software. I guess that is why most modern smart phones have a "garbage and memory and stale cache clear" app. I think many lazy or inexperienced developers just want to push out their apps too quickly to make money, without giving much thought to cleanup code.
@@ИванОмельченко-б7в Computers need to sleep, just like you, don't be cruel to them
@@donovandelozier7156 **sight** except linux...
My favourite idiot IT guy story... I get a call from a customer who wants me to come out and fix their microfilm reader printer which was 'dead'. I ask the obvious questions like... "Are you sure it's plugged in?" and "have you checked the 'doors' are all shut?" and I get the usual "Yes, yes of course I have!" so off I go forty miles down the road to have a look.
When I get there the machine has been moved from its old position in the office to the server room and there it was not plugged in. There was one double socket in the room with the server plugged in one hole and an electric kettle plugged into the other. "There... It's not plugged in." says I... "I'm afraid you're still going to have to pay my call out fee and minimum labour charge so if you'd just sign here please..."
So the guy signs and then reaches down and pulls not the plug on the kettle but the plug leading to the server... The one next to the sign saying in big red letters "DO NOT SWITCH OFF!" and plugs in the reader printer. This gibbering moron was their IT department.
As for why there was an electric kettle in a server room... I don't know either.
they wanna make the server room moist and comfy for the computers LMAO
@@usoap141 For the earl grey tea.
I have also charged someone a callout and labour charge just to switch something on
Well if this guy was charging 10k-20k, then you should charge him 5k for connecting monitor
One of the few things I learn after going into the real world for a while is that Common Sense is surprisingly not that common
"Common sense" is actually quite uncommon
Common sense is actually the rarest thing in this entire earth.
First you have to define what common sense is
It's a bit worse than that, actually. Common sense used to be common, because we used to teach it. It's based on curiosity and logic, the latter of which was a subject in the trivium. The Socialists had it thrown out, apparently thinking nothing bad would result from removing it.
にゃあエイリアンMeowAlien uncommon sense?
I remember a little personal story: I called my ISP to notify them my connection was in trouble, giving them infos like bandwidth and ping. The "IT expert" on the phone cluelessly asked me "What's a ping?"
I hanged up...
Close the windows, you were letting the wifi out
@@nicolopez2181 i hope this is sarcasm
@@aryamanrajaputra9753 Oh my your slow if you actually had to ask that.
@@Lousy_Bastard i know it was probably sarcasm, but some people are dumb enough to believe that [not calling poster dumb]
Did they ask you to unplug it and wait a minute.
The US education system (ours too really, but the US especialy) is geared towards teaching people the answers to the tests, not how to come up with the answers for themselves.
TheAnon03 i am in computer science school and alot of basic stuff is completely missing and only way to learn that is either fucking googling it yourself or going to colege
that really depends on the teacher but for the most part that's true. I've had teachers where (college mainly) the answer was worth only 1/7 from the total score
TheAnon03 I had a college professor for a final exam give us a list of 10 questions and we had to pick 4 for our exam (3 days before the exam). So I picked my 4, went to the college library to find a book to study it and guess what... the exact questions WITH THE ANSWERS were in that text book. Aced it 100% and got called out on it I said the answers and questions were freely available. There’s nothing he could do, same for the school.
I agree....but I thought it was a worldwide issue. Especially with US and Europe public schools.
True. When I was in high-school the practice test ended up being literally the same as the final test for a few teachers
When I was in high school my class went to a computer lab to work on a project. Legend says that there was a computer that didn't work for years.
I turned it on and it beeped a few times. I searched up the error code for that computer and it was the ram.
I open it, take out the ram, put it back in and turn it on.
It worked.
Apparently my school is supposed to have some IT guys that fix these things, but obviously they are too busy doing other things for years to fix a computer for 2 mins.
You should've sent them a bill.
I Google my way through life and end up knowing how to do not just anything I'm required to, but even things I will never need to know. I'm a photographer but I know the steps to make a sink out of a rock. Hell I've watched Primative Technology because absorbing information is interesting and fun. I would hate myself if I became incompetent.
yeah I feel ya.... I hate feeling incompetent. im a mechanic right now even ive never actually work on many thing besides tiny things, making 2 models but I try to catch up as much as I can. I got a pretty good eye for diagnostics however, especially electricity, hydraulics and computers
Garry Reyom Indeed. In the age of Google there is no such thing as "don't know", there is a tutorial or a manual for just about anything man or even alien-made (lol). Problem is people can't be arsed. When i don't know something, a quick online search will educate me, be it a new standard for a lightbulb or latest developments in string theory.
Egonieser Locman alien made? Time to Google!
***** Well, obviously that was a joke... Or was it...?
You've heard of the x-files right? Definitely not a joke
I work with "specialists" on a daily basis and I have no idea what 90% of them are paid for.
I know that feel, North Carolina is bad for that in the educational system. One woman had sticky keys enabled.
Prestige probably
Good, same thing way when you are walking into a hospital.
You know you work with a moron, if you see him having "one click" and "Jump mouse to default button" enabled at the same time.
Now imagine, you come to him, not knowing he has this enabled. You put your USB drive in and it fails to detect the volume right at the moment you double-click the drive.
What you end up is: You click the drive at the first click, get an error message and the fucking mouse cursor snaps to the button saying "FORMAT" and this happens in the same time span of a double click around ~240ms
ExcentriX Holy shit why would you ever set it up like that? Did you bitch slap him with his PC?
Google. The one, real, IT skill that I use most is knowing how to manipulate search terms to find, utilize, and continue utilizing the information I need. When something changes? You find the next person that knows what they're doing or someone with similar issues and you figure it out. Then you JUST. KEEP. DOING. THAT.
Amen. I keep doing that and people are in awe of my "amazing IT skills" and keep asking me to fix their shit even though I know any person could go online, read and fix stuff alone.. Its actually annoying how lazy people have become.
@@P07AT0 Exactly, whenever someone is describing a problem they're having with let's say a phone or something I always ask "Did you Google it or maybe tried going into settings?" Most of the time the answer is no, why people do that? And whats even worse is that this applies to many other things, not only IT related stuff, "hey what's the phone of that store?" Just google it. "Hey what does this word mean?" Fucking google it.
@@Haki145 If a person built it a person can figure out how it works.
it's just that not anyone can have the ability to "do searches online", even in these days, idky but it's just like that, many people ask me to fix their stuff and I just tell them to search for the damn keywords when I don't have time, it works most of the time
Anybody who shows up without a laptop, login information, the ability to check their email on their phone, or the common sense to plug in a VGA cable does not deserve to be called a "specialist"
+ThoolooExpress In british IT Land, we say "specialist are special." {needs}
+Ryan Abbott Do we?
No, suck it yourself mate
"If somebody came up with this shit, who is a human, then I as a human can also figure it out." This is my new fucking motto
Hahaha, yes, I run a small IT support company for over 10 years now and I see this all the time. So called "specialists" for specific business software are the worst. Those people literally can't plug a cable in, create an user account, make a network share or whatever. The only thing they can is click "Next" in the installer of their software.
I regularly get calls where business owners ask me if I could come and hold hands with the "specialist" from the company they bought their expensive business software from because the guy refuses to do anything other on their computers than click "Next" in his installer... they usually claim that it's company policy and that they don't want to be responsible for anything.
Sad thing is: They ACTUALLY f*ck up the customers computer when you convince them to do any actual work. So don't do this, even if it seems impossible to you that one could f*ck up in such a situation!
A while ago I had a case where some business software guy managed to render all four computers in a small architecture firm useless, when he tried to create a network share for his software (the company had no server at that time). I still don't really know how he did it, but after his attempts, you couldn't login on any account on any of those computers. Best thing was: After shutting down the whole company he left because he had to go to the next customer... so they made an emergency call to me, to restore the functionality of their system...
Of course, a lot of the poeple in IT are not only incompetent but also fraudulent. Every few weeks I'm confronted with customers that have been massively lied to and/or overcharged by other IT specialists. One guy in my area systematically sells computer systems to (mostly elder) private persons that are worth 1000 - 2000$ and charges them 5000 - 6000$. And that's just one example of a hundred.
Truth ist: Knowing nothing and clicking "next" in an installer or ripping people off can bring you much more money in tech than actually knowing what you are doing. In the end it's the fair and competent guys like us that hear the wailing of the ripped-off customers and in the end are even asked for a discount since the customers have already wasted all their money on the idiots and freudsters.
My teacher from that scam NIT school I went to ripped me off by building a PC where the mobo wasnt mounted correctly and shorted out. I seem to recall he shut it off before POST was done when I went to pick it up.
One thing Louis has made me realize is that stopping saying, "I don't know," and replacing it by, "How, what etc." definitely gets you far. Instead of defaulting to ask others, you become independent.
Louis, how much did your VGA certification course cost?
Bout $75 when I bought my first monitor
When I reinstalled Windows 10 on my laptop, my roommate asked me if I had a "OS installation course". The best part, he's doing a course in Computer Science Engineering.
you made this up, didn't ya? :D does not Computer Science course begin by "install linux to your computer, possibly along your old Win instalation"?
Tomáš Kasl No, we are not taught to install an OS maybe because it would take a lot of time as most of the Universities do not have projectors in every classroom and the teachers would have to explain it using chalk and blackboard.
Here are 2 more incidents I remember:
Once a guy came to me saying that his laptop is running slow just after 2 days of purchase. Reason? 2gb RAM running Windows 10 x64.
My relative wanted to buy a PC (including monitor, keyboard, speakers, mouse and the usual stuff like antivirus) for his son, so he asked me how much could it cost. I told him it will cost a minimum $350-$500 which was very expensive for him. Clearly annoyed, he bought a "New" PC from his friend for $200. Later when I visited them I checked the specifications. It had celeron, 2gb DDR2 RAM, 80gb HDD, windows XP.
They all sound like they are made up. But the cringe is real.
Sorry for the long comment.
No. You are not taught to install an OS because if you can't install an OS, you don't deserve to even be enrolled in that school.
Millionaire business owner runs Windows server 2006 on a ten year old PC with 2GB of RAM ( well you could log into it, and it somehow manged to serve files, but backups always failed, which they didn't seem concerned about, it did not even have resources to update virus signatures) When I tried to explain these things to him, and mentioned that the server that runs his WHOLE BUSINESS is due to fail completely, he blew me off. What he was concerned about was that his ten year old laptop with its ten year old battery wouldn't hold a charge. Then calls me up on a Friday at 5pm saying his server is down (No shit Sherlock) and expected me to come out immediately and fix it for $25 an hour! And that was the end of that business relationship. Good luck with Geek Squad.
server 2006?
zhen86 lol
How about clients that won't let you lock down their PCs out of fear of alienating their staff, but want to know why you need to come out so often?!
pong lenis He probably means 2016?
He probably means Vista Business, the 2006 version of windows NT.
...and I still can't get a job in IT
Ikr
+99MHz of Gaming can i charge u 10k-20k to install something...
+99MHz of Gaming
Stop waiting for a job. Hire yourself. If you can't hire yourself, maybe you don't deserve a job.
+nustada not knowing different laws for self empliyment in different countries, just talking shit, thx.
+99MHz of Gaming I had the same issue, i'm an electronics engineer, self taught in IT, I ran my own IT business until I couldn't handle the stress of dealing with stupid customers.
I applied to work at a local school, doing their IT, I would have been working with an old friend of mine, but they gave the job to some graduate in computer science WHO on their first day couldn't even do a clean install of Windows AND jammed a USB mouse into a parallel printer port (how is that even possible?).
Want a job in IT? get a worthless degree and talk a lot of BS.
Oh please, everyone knows you have to be a level 97 Necromancer in order to be able to cast VGA spells.
If you can not plug in a monitor you should not call yourself a IT specialist...
Idiocracy is becoming real.
Oh o back to school for this it dude
No joke a co worker ask what is electrolyte
@Ricardo Santos but they still should be able to plug a fucking cable in.
Or a person living in a XXI century.
Reminds me of a scene from IT Crowd when Roy asks someone on the phone "You do know how a button works? (...) Excuse me, are you from the past?"
PREACH! I'm in the Navy and we have specific ratings (job specialties). I'm technically an Electronics Technician, an ET. But I've started referring to myself as Everything Tech, because I am so tired of lazy people saying "I'm not trained to do that" or "that's not my job". I was trained to repair electronics, mostly radios and radar. But I'm currently working as a system admin, because that is what I need to be able to do right now. I have no mechanic experience, but I've taken apart and repaired the diesel engine in a HMMV because no one else could be bothered to fix it and I needed it to run. I learned to repair generators and HVAC systems because we didn't have anyone "qualified" at the time. I learned to pick locks because no one in the military seems to be able to keep track of a set of keys for more than a few days. We live in a time when the information you need to learn almost ANYTHING is available nearly instantly anywhere you go. Fuck the specialist attitude. Love your videos. Tons of good stuff. Keep it up!
+etjrowe thank you!
Well said! I think it's a great thing to kind of be a jack of all trades type
Right on! "Can do!" and "I'll figure it out!" I once referred to myself as the "guy who does what no one else is qualified to do."
But did He update Acrobat Reader ?
hahahahah
Animuj Michal just install Google Ultron. it has PDF reader
Animuj Michal few people will get this, I'm lucky to be a part of the few
A surprising number of people will get this Keyboard Warrior.
Don't dude it was hacked.......
Hi Louis. Sometimes so called "safety legislation" blocks your path in the most annoying way. My central heating boiler failed (no ignition) and I quickly realized that the control board was at fault since it was one of my own designs from a few years back. I could quickly diagnose the fault down to a faulty diode (the one fitted was not to my spec) but I could not remove the board to repair it without breaking the security seal. No choice but to call in the gas board "qualified" technician who in fairness quickly diagnosed a faulty control board and quoted me €400 plus labour. we sold these to the manufacturer for €12.49 plus the fact that I knew it only needed a 5 cent diode. Luckily being a semi state body the obligatory "lunch time" arrived and the guy bade me farewell, promising to be back shortly. Well guess what, he left the board on the worktop and I seized the opportunity to replace the diode. After returning from his lunch some 2 hours later I suggested he try the board again just in case it was merely a bad connection. He agreed and lo and behold everything was perfect. So there you have it I was not "qualified" to repair my own design
You should have just broken the seal. Who's gonna know?
maybe insurance company etc, if it blows up etc?
Sadly, such legislation is often needed to prevent people from killing themselves and the unfortunate people around them.
Very true. At a metalworking complex I used to work at I witnessed the CEO's son high on ego try to fix a CNC machine himself only for him to touch the wrong things and electrocute himself to death.
@Undefined Lastname Yeah, let's allow people to DIY the wiring in their apartments. It's not like there are other people who would be harmed by a fire. The truth is that usually, when a person does a stupid thing, it harms the people around him or her as well.
"If somebody came up with this shit, who is a human, then I as a human can also figure it out." Absolutely spot on, sir.
+SolidStateWorkshop What if im not human.
Then props for figuring out how to use a computer and write in english.
Solid State Workshop resources and time play a huge role, so is not enough to be a human.
Advice for KVMs, just in case some idiot leaves a "Do you want to format this computer and sell your soul to Satan" dialog box on, use control, shift, or caps lock (rather than spacebar) as your default resume key.
Windows will usually send you to a login screen, not the current session.
That sounds like a needless suggestion to a situation that only a completely imbecile and moronic person would do.
Based on my coworkers, I'll do it.
+1 to this suggestion. Saved my ass one time
@StoveToast timed out screen? By default sleep will send you to the lock screen, as will the screensaver.
I usually use servers with builtin remote management and KVM. I never bother with consumer grade hw and external KVM facility. Especially if even cheaper servers are equipped or can be optionally equipped with it those days. WIth such system you can even flash bios and reinstall os remotely from scratch.
I worked for a server maintenance company and one of my customers was a group of hospitals. One hospital had a domain controller that was "down". I got a call for it at midnight. Local support didn't know what to do. I go to my office, grab some possible parts, head over to the hospital and see nothing on the screen. Hitting a key did nothing, KVM connected. I got a monitor and keyboard, made a quick crash cart, and hooked it up and see something on the screen: "the error log is full. Press F1 to continue". I clear the error log, server boots in to windows, domain controller is back online. This did help prove that the vendor didn't configure redundancy properly, but the local support didn't think to plug in a monitor and see what was going on bc technically a monitor was already plugged in. So in short, hitting F1 to continue helped me get a job there a few years later, which helped them as well. 11 years later, I'm still here.
One 3rd party tech once tried to pull a live server out of a rack without unplugging anything, to replace a drive in a front hotswap bay....
I loved every minute of this rant. I've dealt with vendors like this who have no clue what they're doing with anything outside their very specific area and it's frustrating to all hell.
Tbh I knew how to plug in a VGA monitor by the time I was like 5. Blue plug goes to blue plug; power goes to the wall. It's really not that complicated
You would be surprised how many bent pins I come across.
@Carl Matthew Hamilton - CHTSI Fair enough, but if you plug it in and the plug fits, but you still don't get a signal, then you know your problem isn't the type of connector, and is more likely the physical integrity of said connector. It's a basic troubleshooting process.
i learned to hook up a vga monitor when i was 10. i looked at it and hooked it up
+Shad0 R3ap3r Gaming I'm sure a 4 year old could do it if it wasn't for the screws. Blue goes with blue, crazy right?
+wareagle3065 Like legos.
Hell, I remember before I knew things about computers that I wanted to fix an issue my first one had initially, where kicking it would make it reboot or die. I opened it not knowing what to expect, but giving no fucks about it being more broken afterwards, and I found one plug backed out quite a bit. I put 2 and 2 together, thinking that my Genesis controller would not work correctly if the plug weren't inserted all the way, and pushed in the plug of that fat ass ribbon cable. No more stalls and crashes from small amounts of shock.
Lesson: Ride a tire swing, and you'll always go back to where you started. Ride a bike and you can go wherever the fuck you please.
Congratulations. You matched the colours. You can thank the PC'97 spec for that.
When you want something done, do it yourself. Don't know how to do it? Figure it out, we have google. And if you are still having trouble, use your brain and try harder. Anyone can fix a computer if they try and take the time.
How in the fuck can't an "IT Specialist" plug in a monitor and charge $20k?, Jesus fucking Christ.
just watched this. i totally hear ya. i nearly blew my stack when the IT tech defined Chrome as a virus because he didn't know how to set default programs.
2001 I wasnt sure how to add a network card to my PC and had to have a friend show me.
Today I am the go-to IT guy, and know tonnes more than that friend.
While this rant is hilarious, the fact that we have IT specialists wandering out there who don't know how to even plug in a monitor/keyboard disturbs me greatly.
This reminds me of when I was buying a CPU. I was literally forced to start teaching someone who is selling these stuff about cores, socket and generations of CPU.
Henry Mmene i see you’re a man of culture 🧐
r/iamverysmart
happens to me every time I visit my local store. Also the weird look the guy gives you is nasty.
@@-Duyuc-CA-N Are they though? Trying to hard or even at all I mean
This is one of my favorite videos that you have released. I learned early on that learning how to fix anything that I can figure out was useful and needed. I also had an electronics instructor that impressed into us that the guy that can figure out how things work and fix it will always be more needed and secure in his job than the guy who only knows how to swap a part. In my life I have only been unemployed one time that lasted more than a few days, and with only a tech school certificate in electronics, I work at a relatively high level within my organization.
The thing is accountability. Sometimes being nice and helping someone fires back. If you touch something you own it. If for some reason that thing you touched and did something as simple as plugging a monitor fails, people will ask who touched it. And you will be responsible. Even if what you did has absolutely nothing to do with the problem they will still blame you.
Louis, I appreciate your brutal honesty! I am not a Techie, but I love watching your videos because of your Critical Thinking and Analytical prowess.
I guarantee you that most of these IT specialists have certifications up the ying yang. Years ago I was working Server 2000 via command (cacls no less) and in walks the next latest and greatest to tell me he has all the microsoft certs. As he is watching me work, he says "what is that?" Hmmm, it's the command line. He says it again, "what is that?"
pistonpilot I have a whole buch of certs myself, most of which are completely meaningless. They pretty much hand them out just for showing up.
That's not entirely true. I had at one time some Cisco certifications. I worked hard to get them. You didn't get them by showing up, you got them by passing the certification test.
pistonpilot Well yes, obviously. But really, how challenging were those tests?
Microsoft specialists are so fucking retarded. Whenever you ask a question on microsoft's website with those "specialists" , they always give some of the dumbest answers to questions about using Windows. Some thinking Windows 7 and windows XP are the same thing, some telling you that you need to use the goddamn CMD just to access the control panel which already has a shortcut on the start button, and some saying your PC is not good enough to run new microsoft software when you have an i7 with 8GB of ram with a 400 dollar GPU, and some saying that an important windows process in the taskmanager is a virus, this is so ridiculous, seriously.
And then the bastards mark the issue as solved and lock the thread, so no-one can give a real answer.
If that is the level of an IT-specialist, I suppose I will have to call myself "Super IT-specialist, over 9000"!
Wouldn't do that if I were you. Before you know, you'll be running around "fixing" everyone's computer after they installed the latest malware again.
Oh, and if ever you find yourself becoming a software developer: don't be like me and actually tell people when they ask... Instead, tell 'em you're a teamlead, or in middle management or something. Not software developer, not even accountant! Pick something with absolutely zero real-world applicable skills. It's the only way to protect your gaming time. ;)
HEADSHOT!!!!!!
Just tell them you work at denny's and you got told off last week about giving discounts or having visitors so don't bother asking or coming in...also if you have a company car with the logo splattered all over it, just tell them you bought it super cheap because of the branding and you plan on getting it repainted soon. If you have to answer your phone with the business's name and standard greeting, just tell them you're helping a friend. If you have to wear a uniform with the business logo, just tell them [Business Name] makes some really great shirts, and then talk about how stain resistant it is or some shit. If they get interested in your miracle shirt and ask where they can get one, just tell them you got it in another country that time you were out on uh denny's....er..related...uh... Fuck it, just tell them you fudged your references, embellished your resume, and you have no idea what you're doing at your job.
*Bonus points if it's true*
"Don't confuse schooling with education"
- Elon Musk
Elon Musk is a clown
sebb - thanks for your input
@@Omlet221 he's a buffoon then.
hyperloop by 2020 - elon musk
@@lilylopnco vaush on yt has a pretty good take on Elon musk.
Want to be a IT specialist? Can you plug in a vga cable?You can?Congrats! You're already a professional it specialist!
Ricky9111999 No no no no no. If you can plug in monitor you're not an IT specialist. You're a god amongst men. One time I successfully installed Google Chrome and I can proudly call myself a level 3 IT guy. I'm pretty sure that to master monitor installation you have to be at least a level 70 IT guy, or a level 8 Wizard.
I must be a Grandmaster IT Specialist and a Plumber. I built my whole machine, and liquid cooled it with a 560 mm radiator, 1080 SLI, and it's on a utility cart so I can setup my HTC Vive in any room I want. What the fuck with the "cannot plug a cable in for a 10,000 ~ 20,000 dollar job"? You could have a professional killer do a hit job for that money, and see a picture of a dead body. =w=
te
nshi7angel
Welcome to the ranks of "People Who Have Brains." Please visit reddit's Tales From Tech Support to see more.
RoboRexton oh shit, I'm god then, I built my own computer and repair my own tech
Thank you for this Louis. I've been a Dev for 18 years and I am not the brightest knife in the box by any means. What I can do is think, step back and look at the big pic, actually deal with people, understand what they need/want vs what they say, be polite and professional despite my 'feelings' toward them and get the job done despite roadblocks. I tell my kids all the time that they will NEVER have to worry about having a job ever if you do a couple things. Be real during an interview, be calm, think, treat people nice, admit when you don't know something then go figure it out, follow up with people a week after a fix, show people you care and if you do those things better than the actual work you do (to a point) you will be loved and needed thus retaining a job. UGH!! Great vids Louis!
+JoeCubicle Thank you!
Curiousity is what made technology, it's something every person is born with. What happened with curiousity these days?
Really happened: *sees an 'ok' button, the only clickable thing on screen. "what should i do?" i heard a customer asking....
Ricardo Schuchmann basically everyone I know who isn’t in tech
"Doesn't give two shits of a fuck". I like that. I have now added that to my list of funny things to say and impress people with. Thank you.
+Ryan Patrick "half a flying shit" is a pretty decent one too
I will say something too. This video, reminded me how idiotic some computer service stores can be ... .
One of my stories, that above statement is correct: Once, someone goes to store, says that DVD-burner is not working and they keept computer for 3 days and what do you think, what did they say? "Sorry, your DVD-burner died, you need another one". Ok then costumer agreed and they added new burner in. They left old one as agreed. After one week, that person came to me, and said, that old's DVD-burner light still turns on and if I can help him. I said ofcourse. When I opened computer case, IDE and power cable are still connected to a old burner. Just for kicks, I only pulled out both connectors and connected them back, turned computer on and DVD-burner was working like a charm.
So ... what do you think about this situation? There was been even easier and harder things, where "technicians" done theirs "great" work. I too do not have college, just high school, almost all things I know, I learned by my self. And even not, that I am not programing websites and apps for Android, because of my health issues. I can still beat manny techs by using logic and research, while is not too complex.
I just hate those people, that calls themself "technician"... so anyone wants to share your story?
By the way, Louis, great video =)
I experienced what you said first hand. I attended graduate school in the US. One day, when I was doing my thesis, I messed around with my glasses because one of the legs was wobbly. The tiny screw came off and I couldn't put it back. I rushed to the nearest optician which was in a mall. There was a long line and the guy at the front desk told me repair would cost me $20+. I couldn't wait so I went to a sunglasses shop in the same mall. The first thing the guy at the shop said when I show him my glasses was "Are those correction glasses? ... Wow... I'm not suppose to touch those. It will get me into trouble." I asked him very nicely and told him that I have a paper to finish and he finally agreed to fix my glasses. Sqink sqink sqink... took him 2 seconds. Now I carry a mini-screwdriver wherever I go just in case.
I like your videos and I think you are a damn smart person. People should realize that a certificate/degree/education doesn't make you smart, just perhaps more of a bigot. Come on America! Where's that can-do spirit?
...are you trying to tell me an IT professional can't plug in a fucking VGA cable!??!?!?!
I must be the next Einstein, fuck...
+Dell0304
Impressive stupidity isn't it, just imagine if they had to build a a server let alone mess with anything ancient. People my age are clueless about ancient things like XT/AT era machines that businesses use for industrial use ect.
The sad part is, I'm 18 and I own at least one AT machine, and I know how it works. Computers aren't rocket science.
Like Louis said, it's not so much about your certs or anything, it's about having some common sense.
+Dell0304 Probably one of those idiots that got into IT because he thought it paid well, while having zero interest or experience in the field.
Most people who are actually interested in IT, build their own PCs, so they know how to plug in a goddamn monitor and much more.
+MrKillswitch88 exactly, I will love to see them trying to setup a multi-io card with the jumpers, or deal with a computone multiport hehe, is so easy now...
+Dell0304 I can only imagine if it was a DVI-D or DVI-I or ... any other DVI type cable... that lady would have lost her fucking mind.
dude, i know that dance. it's called "I'll say anything just to not have to think".
I completely understand your frustration. Been in the industry for nearly 25 years and I can't think of a single time when I said "I don't know" without immediately following it with "but I'll figure it out." That's why people who were my boss when I started now work under me. Specializing in one area is great but you need to at least have a basic understanding of all surrounding technologies if you want to be truly successful.
Got here by randomly looking at one of Linus' videos, watched a few of the videos on the channel, as an 18 year IT pro, also no college degree myself, I can say, you are the real deal, if I were cross country, your the type of individual I'd want to work with. To the point and with common sense.
thanks for watching!
Yeah there was an "IT specialist" at my school... She had a job to restrict students from going to some sites, from installing applications and so on. So she installed the Microsoft parent or whatever it is called on all computers and called it a day... My brother after a week showed her 3 ways of going around that software. He was a student too BTW...
Lagger Onesixfour idk how someone who is supposed to be an expert in stuff like that can't expect something like a vpn
Sharded Gem lol that's weak, my school uses fortiguard which on its own a vpn should make quick work of. But i think they bundled it with a Vpn blocker. It's a pain in the ass, fortiguard is wicked intrusive. It's just cancer.
Students are like prisoners. They have nothing but time and motivation to figure a way around controls. Most School IT people are union and do their best to avoid doing actual work.
3:28 "doesn't give two shits of a fuck"
Clearly, I need to work on my cursing game...
Well said sir!
If I call myself an IT specialist can I...please? Actually, I now never tell people I know about computers, because they expect me to (1) be magically expert in every electronic device ever invented and (2) fix every IT problem instantly, permanently and for free. Oh, and (3) take the blame for their breaking my fixes.
So now I have time for the finer things in life. Like, for instance....
+Stefan Travis "I spilled coffee on my computer and you were the last to fix it, therefore it's your fault"
-Client logic
based on my experience, IT guy that have so much competency, are the one who swears a lot.. haha
Ali Abdallah
This shit... right here.
It takes someone who's good at their job to realised how screwed they are :D
Corvid "Fuck man, they removed that shit?! I'm going to fucking kill myself."
8 Becacause these words are *_The Words of Power,_* and they will help you. They will help you when the servers die, the backups are either erroring or fried, along with your job, and you have five criticals still to do within the hour.
Dear god thank you for saying this.
From 10:05 and on, YOUR REAL LIFE SCHOOL LESSON BEGINS. Pay attention and bookmark it to listen to it until you can recite it like the Pledge of Allegiance. Unlike Louis, I did get my A+ Certification and wanted to certify on other things and had this notion that I couldn't touch anything else that I wasn't certified on. Imagine, I even have an Associates degree in Audio Recording. I relate to Louis so much because we've been involved in things quite similar. Even his name is like mine. He's got to be my brother from another mother! HERE'S MY STORY: I worked from 2001 to 2005 for a big company in Illinois that did upgrades for customer orders making $9/hour. Each day that passed I asked myself when I was going to leave this dump hole. In order to start making a "positive change" in my mind I decided to go back to school and study Management and go to school after work. I didn't planned to have the company pay for tuition but they did and they made it easy. To make the story short, 2 weeks before I had finished my management degree to go from the warehouse into an office environment , I went upstairs to get coffee from the "big shots" coffee maker because they had better coffee then us poor technicians, so I went there and stopped, had a sip of my coffee and looked at the cubicles and said to myself: "this is my new working environment, I will be doing what they're doing and will be making more money." I felt like the guy from Coming to America that said: See I'm washing lettuce, soon I'll be on fries, then grill and about two years assistant manager and that's where the big bucks start rolling in. SO GUESS WHAT I DID? I packed my things and left the company within 3 weeks after that trip upstairs. The mentality I was creating during those times were similar to what Louis explains here from 10:05 on. I was feeling that I could do this on my own and make my own money. I knew by experience that people needed me to do things they didn't want to do because they couldn't do it even if I explained it to them. Also the biggest influencer and motivator was that Geek Squad was ripping people off and I could fix their computers for the fraction of that price. So I decided to break my agreement with the company of NOT opening shop on them. I was smart. I kept it low key and was coming out of my basement and visiting customers like an old fashion doctor that takes home calls. It became a very successful entreprise for me at a moment when the economy in 2008 was struggling. This is when I realized that I could do anything I put my actions into. Today I am learning Python and other languages. I love programming more than fixing computers. There's an underserved market in the Spanish-speaking communities in the field of Education. I'm about to make gadgets, games and other programs for this community and I can do it because anyone can if you really want to. Learn by trial and error, learn with books, learn by doing and learn from youtube. People like Louis serve almost 3/4 of a million subscribers. You are getting this content for free. You are learning real life experience with no BS attached to it. AND I LEAVE YOU WITH THIS: Put his videos up in your workbench while you work on your systems and get inspiration my friends.
Education doesn't necessarily make you smart.
I would dissagree and definitely say you are smart because you took your time and sit down, lokk around and understand the world better. Something that is very important nowadays.
+1
+Ni De Education alone doesn't make you smart. You can recite the OSI layer and give out all network topology but if you can't apply that knowledge to something practical then you are just as useful as paperweight.
+Ni De Exactly! Being smart is not knowing all the answers, being smart is knowing where to find the answers.
+Ni De Education is what other people do to you, learning is what you do to yourserf. - Joi Lto
And as a great freaking example i have a buddy in my IT course who does not know how to boot windows from usb even after watching and reading how to change bios setting.
Yes education is important but if the person is not using it well then where is the problem in the persons actions or education ... you get the point
I agree, I think you are being modest, Louis. Just because you find some of these things easy it doesn't mean that most do. I found certain things easy to troubleshoot and solve that my fellow students(some studying Computer Science like me) just could not understand and this was at a top University and involved Windows troubleshooting, so not very hard. From one University drop out(health reasons) to another I think you've done extremely well.
I can't stop watching your videos and that is saying something because I only watch 1-7 videos usually on average TH-cam channels I like. Much respect to you, mate
You should do a TED talk ;)
Because people who TEDx talks don't know what they are talking about?
You just got a new subscriber. One of my life motto's "A human made it, and human can fix it". As you say I don't have certification, but you can't learn at school why "smps phone charger isn't charging, and cables are good". We have natural curiousness that has disappeared, that's why some people pay's someone else to change light bulb. 15 yrs i'm into IT and consumer electronics. but when i got my first PC, that was Pentium II when I was 18th yrs old, Didn't know what to do next when I powered IT up, now I am 33yrs old, IT system engineer without any certification and IT school background . Rest is history ....
i was under the impression that we just said "hey alexa" and then hammered that bulb right into the socket like god intended.
@@hannahnelson4569 Cortana on the other hand told me how to screw a lightbulb ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
@@mishmash6169 failure is the best teacher
@@hannahnelson4569 unless you die because of a failure.^^
@@philippesoares1745 hasn't happened yet
Preaching the word man! So many people who just see a problem or an issue and just do nothing
That monitor story is unbelievable.
Not if you've worked in the IT field in the last five years. The bar for being called a specialist is so low that it's actually fairly common to hear stupid shit like this.
+Alex Fernandez I've worked in IT for 2 years. embedded C++ developer. All of our contractors have been exceptional and professional. I wonder what she was a specialist in...
+theprince08853 Okay so you actually got what you paid for then. Trust me, it's pretty pathetic out there.
Isn't hooking up a monitor kindergarten shit? I mean it's shapes and colors.
+SeeWaffle9 I was hooking up my monitor when I was 7 or something. You goddamn right.
+KrautMasker Did it when I were 6 years old.
0R3R couldn't get a computer until I was 7 :P
+KrautMasker lol I had a 10 year old Pentium III!
0R3R That's fucking cool, get outta here... I was blown away when I heard Core 2 Duo or something, but hey it didn't mean shit :D
Louis, I would agree. It' a weird mindset. I run into it sometimes over the years and I have been working in IT since 1997. I used to work at a VAR and have these people come in to do software installs or hardware installs and have no clue about how any other technology which is also part of their field works. They fear change, don't have common sense or fear learning something new. I am pretty self-taught as well. You have to be able to learn these things and not be afraid of it.
Louis I think you're my IT spirit animal. I've made a successful IT career out of refusing to say that I don't know how to do something. My daily work is as a systems analyst but I'm comfortable in a room filled with DBAs, server admins, programmers, electrical engineers, etc. If there's anything that angers me more about "IT professionals," it's the ones that complain about a lack of training. Learn it your fucking self! IT requires a very high degree of autonomy and critical thinking. A lot of people in IT LIKE the IDEA of working in IT, but they hate the idea of putting in the WORK to learn the systems that they will be managing ALL THE WAY DOWN TO THE CHIPS AND BITS. It's good for me, in a way, because I stand out, but it's also extremely frustrating to work alongside some people who couldn't care less about the inner workings of our systems, and how they can leverage that knowledge to get the most out of them. Great video, thanks for sharing!
+Derangedteddy I'm glad to hear it!
Correct me if I'm wrong, but from what I remember I was told that the true definition of stupidity is the refusal or inability to learn.
The woman described in this story is a US. marine with only 2 days training and a pair of socks running full tilt into a minefield.
Quite a few years ago, I was between jobs and was working part-time at a McD's on the late night shift. One night our "district IT person" to install new software. She didn't know how to open the CD-ROM drive. Seriously. I had to open the drive for her. I asked how she got the job and it was a "reward" for having been a good store manager. The truly sad thing is that I had applied for that position but I wasn't considered qualified even though I had spent twenty years as a programmer and had done network installs and configurations during that time as well.
Sadly, too often in the tech world, you don't have to know much to get a job but knowing too much can keep you from getting a job.
Agree..
I would have refused. "Sorry I'm not qualified"
Every single tech in the business SHOULD be an extremely good Google searcher. About half the problems I run across I've never seen before and it takes X amount of minutes (depending on the problem) to find and fix it. You have the entire collection of human experience and knowledge in the palm of your hands. Use it.
"I can put together a Linux distribution without reading the Gentoo manual"
I laughed at that for God knows how long
I had that here in the UK. Well known Hotel chain had their booking system guys in, they would not patch a network cable from the network switch to the patch panel to make their port on the wall live. I had to drive an hour to do it for them...
The bit about the KVM reminded me of one of the places I worked at, I was never big, all I did was the easy stuff, build custom pcs, fix virus ridden pcs, install new computers etc...
But I was the only person in our establishment who did this with the exception of an intern who worked for two hours every Thursday.
I too was only an intern though, but not exactly, I was placed there by my countrys version of the unemployment office as part of "gain work experience" program.
So I only worked from 9am to 2pm instead of the usual 9 to 5.
Any way, after being there for a couple of months I felt that my setup was horribly inneficient, I had a desk with 2 monitors on it and a wall with roughly 100 computers stockpiled for various jobs I was supposed to perform, with only 2 monitors I could only have 2 computers up at a time and yeah, it was no fun at all.
I, at my own expense, ordered a KVM switch, and started having 5 computers going at a time instead of 2, in just a week I had managed to clear out half of the backlogged computers and was on good track to clear out our entire backlog. Since my output was higher than the influx of new jobs.
But then I arrived at work one day and the KVM switch was gone, my boss had sold it, didn't even give me back the money I had spent on it.
I convinced him to at least order a replacement KVM switch, but literally the day after it arrived, he sold that one too and told me no more KVM switches, he don't like them.
As a result, our backlog started growing again and a few months later my time there ended, they hired a replacement for the position I was holding while I was there about a week after my time ended, and funnily enough, it was someone I knew, and I happen to know that he quit because he wasn't allowed to improve the system with a KVM switch for the exact same reason.
I never did get reimbursed for that KVM switch...
I don't really know much of IT (except for stuff I need to know in order to hook my things up and keep my house WiFi running), but man that's incredibly painful to read.
I was doing some computer work in a dental office reception and between the two reception computers there was a printer. It was physically connect to one of the computers via USB cable. But the lady using the other computer said she cannot print to that printer. I asked why and she said their previous IT guy said it's not possible. So I say "That's odd. Are you sure?" She says "Definitely! He swore it's not possible" Every time she printed something (which was MANY times a day) she had to get up and go to the other side of the room where there was a large networked laser printer/fax. So I'm thinking of different scenarios in my head as to what weird incompatibilities could cause this anomaly because both computers had the same OS and were networked, etc. This wasn't what I was there to fix, but I felt bad for her because in the hour I was there she must have got up 10 times to go to that other printer while there was one sitting beside her that her workmate was printing to. So I asked if she minded if I try something and she agreed reluctantly thinking I was wasting my time. I shared the printer on her workmates computer then found it on the network from hers and connected to it. Ran a test print and boom...the thing start printing LOL She nearly fell off her feet with shock. She said "I can't believe it! You must be a genius. That other guy SWORE to me me that it was impossible!! What did you do??" I said "I did nothing unusual. I'm not a genius either. I'm can't really be sure why he would say it would not work...worked for me first try....maybe ask him" LOL
+Mark D Gotta love it when someone else's lack of knowledge makes you look like a genius
Intressteing video, i live and work in Sweden as an IT Technician, at my company where i work we belive as long as you can't do basic I/0 testing or diagnostics on a computer or a setup, you shouldnt be working with IT.
To be fair, Louis got a great point, its embaressing that this dude "could" not hook up a VGA monitor to a server, even if it runs a KVM Switch, doesnt matter, a KVM switch isnt something new.
Really sad that someone uses a title as "IT Specialist" when they cant do basic I/0 diagnostics on a setup, just so sad, brings dirt to the IT industry.
Also, Louis, if you read this, I heard you are running multibale servers for different purposes, if I could give you a personal advice it would be to look into ESXI, to run your server virutally on 1 server, with more power, being able to power all youre 4 or 5 servers (or how many you got) in just one physical server.
Sorry for my bad english, not my first lanugage, I try as well as I can.
Love your videos, gives me the tech orgams when you fix all the messed up motherboards!
Thank you!
Yo Louis, I had to send this video to a bunch of people who are in the "peers" in the IT space with me, because what you are describing here is exactly them. There is a mentality you need to survive and grow as a technologist and you work with people just as much as you work with technology. I couldn't articulate my frustrations with them as clear as you have in this video so i sent this to them so they can at least get a glimpse of what i'm talking about. Being in IT you need to constantly learn, and learn, and learn, I didn't know half the mountain of skills and shit i know now 3 years ago when i started in IT, now i'm building datacenters, integrating systems, building domains with AD,EXCH,SP, ticketing systems, NAS, Deploying sql clustered services across multiple cloud provider, . None of it i took "classes" for or got certifications on at the time, i just learned and went on to the next problem to solve then learned..then rinse and repeat. Thank you for posting this rant, even though its already 2 years old it is still going to be a relevant and accurate video today as it is 15 years ago and 50 years into the future. (unfortunately)
Oh man, this just opened up an old wound of mine. I was working at a tech house in the SF Bay in the early 2000s (right before the big tech crash there). They had hired some kid fresh out of college, and I was charged with getting him set up around the office. I got some hardware together for a desktop, put it all together, threw a copy of Windows at him and said, "let me know when you've got that installed." He responded with, "I don't know how to do that." I asked him what his major was in college, he said, "CIS".... A CIS major that couldn't install Windows...the most brain-dead OS install imaginable. I told him his folks needed to demand a refund on his education (but really he was just an idiot). The worst part? When the stock market crashed in late 2001, they laid me off and kept him. I suspect because he was boating buddies with one of the owners.
Get... Fucking...Rekt
Louis, you life saver!!!!! a KVM Switch!!!! thank You so much
I like how you manage to put these thing into words. This grinds my gears almost daily.
Man... I gotta meet you or at least talk to you. You may call BS but you’re inspiring as hell.
I respect you Louis, common sense, keep it real bro.
As an engineer, who was at a different time in my life an IT professional, thank you for exposing this. I ran into so many people that didn't even come close to knowing how to do their job.
I call it the 'can do' attitude. I fire people who get stumped by problems without looking for a solution. That is straight up laziness.
i watch this from time to time and send to all my buddies ... its legendary
Absolutely hilarious.
I work for a small it consulting company, we do almost everything for small businesses...
Dealing with third party software guys is almost always this fun. Specially for all our dental clients.
And the support... My god the support. (To be fair some are better than others and even the worst one has that 1 guy who's actual gold)
1k people must be IT specialists. 😂
I'm an idiot, but I can solve most simple computer issues because I know how to use google to find specific information, people ask me how to fix their stuff all the time, I feel like a google proxy at this point.
you don't give yourself enough credit man, you are very smart you just learn differenlty than the standard of schooling today, keep up the good work
I think it's more like they are afraid they going to get sued if somthing goes wrong.
The title alone made me upvote this
+Virginia - Prince of all Sandwiches True that. LMAO
i couldn't agree more brother, I know EXACTLY what you're talking about and I'm an IT support specialist. Cannot tell you how many incompetent people I've met or worked for in the business that made me wonder how the F they even managed to tie their own shoes in the morning, it's pathetic. My main thing is networking and security for computers, but I used to do unlocks\jailbreaks for people for their shitty iphones, I change faucets and just learned to do full cleaning for PTAC AC units because I couldn't find a competent HVAC person to do it properly. Just like you, I grew up in Brooklyn but I wasn't born in US, so I'm not afraid to do new things and have the same confidence you have in my work when I work on computers. It's mind boggling how many people are clueless about technology and lack common sense but yet claim they work in "IT", I never understood how these people ever got their jobs to be making such wild claims like that when they can't even find the god damn shortcut to their desktop on their desktop. Love your channel, keep up the great work, it's very informative and helpful information that everyone can find something to take away for themselves.
Most important skill in IT is sadly the hardest to find. That skill is the ability to quickly learn and apply basic knowledge and even some more advance stuff. Technology changes all the time. How it works, what it looks like, and how it is implemented/integrated always shifting. Our job is to be able to adapt and shift with it, but not forget about the older stuff because they are still in play. But there is no way in hell any single person can know how to use everything piece of tech, how to fix, and/or understand how it all works then remember it all. Then try figuring out how to make the old work with the new, sometimes that requires a person that a specialized type of skill and understanding, like getting an Nintendo 64 to give HD output across an HDMI or DVI port and cable, but some not so much like getting a device that uses molex power connectors to be powered with modern computers by using a simple molex to sata adapter.
Sadly, I know of many computer "techs" these days, that can't solve that last example, may even think it impossible. I would hate and love to see their heads explode when they learn of laser disc or MUSE-LD HiDef but then try to help people set them up with their computers.
a specialist is supposed to be someone who has all the base knowledge PLUS very in depth knowledge of a specific thing :P
LTT brought me here and I subbed and enjoy your videos but you are way too advanced with this tech stuff I only know the basics and even then I don't understand what you do, but I still enjoy it.
Also is it bad that I want to be a computer hardware engineer and don't understand some of the stuff you do and how you do it? Btw I'm 16
Learning comes with doing, if you've never done it, you don't know it and if you never will try it because you don't currently know it, you never will.
I swear Louis, every video of yours I see, in particular the ones like this where you put up pain points like this that i have dealt with for the past 20+ years of mixed IT work I have done, most of it walking into completely unfamiliar territory... It really makes me want to take the 4 hour drive into the "shitty" from the Catskills to buy you a beer. I may just have to drop by with a 6 pack next time I find myself in NYC. Keep it up, man.
That being said, I am actually working on a new physical product and training course which I am planning on working with middle schools through colleges to teach basic IT literacy from the chip level up to systems and application development to try to curb this wave of high tech users who are completely fucking oblivious to how this stuff actually works. Maybe I'll ship you a proto board to do a build and review on, should you have the time (it is designed to be a kit).
and for the record, this is all as someone who is technically a high school dropout with a GED and no certifications... but decades of real world, hard earned knowledge and skills, who NEVER gave up on some project because "well gee, i don't know that..."
This was so fucking hilarious. First video I've ever seen of you and you are my new favorite sub because you really spoke to me as a fellow human being. I don't know if you read your insane amount of comments but I thought I would share why I am so happy to find your channel...
I've always been considered bright, but my teachers thought never put in the ""effort" in school because I
was really talkative and excited all the time. Catholic High school was no different, I scored a 29 cumulative on the ACT which could basically get me into any damn university I pleased. I started college fresh out of high school, but it didn't go according to the standard American narrative of "four years, get a career, get married start a family"...
I've been a technology addict since my parents bought me a NES (with Duck hunt!) for my birthday and a music fanatic since I can remember, so with a group of college friends I started a DJ collective that was successful supporting mainstage EDM acts in the Midwest. Over my first three years in college I took a wide array of classes trying to find a niche, while spending more time on producing music and DJing than on homework. Throughout this time I developed a severe pharmaceutical opiate addiction that stemmed from an injury in my childhood , and eventually ended up using heroin instead because it was cheaper and more effective. So obviously I stopped going to school. I went to rehab and moved back home. After getting my footing again, I went to a technical college nearby and obtained an Associates Degree in Music engineering. I wasn't satisfied with just an associates so I decided to give University schooling another shot. I've been in the Computer Science program at my school for 2 years now, most of my old credits were worthless but I'm making good progress. However there is just something missing. I feel a void in my education, I have always, like you, thought I could learn things and figure them out on my own faster than sitting in a classroom. I just feel like the wheels turning but I am not going anywhere. I've been educating myself outside of school on technologies that are not being taught in the classroom. At this point I am 27 with 6 years clean from IV heroin that in all likelihood should have killed me, and I guess it just really brightened my outlook to hear you talk about your failures in school that way. You talk about problem solving and self-learning in a manner that really spoke to me on a profound level. It was just what I needed to hear, that someone so alike myself, with a breadth of interests and skills, who doesn't really fit the natural mold of a "good student" can really succeed in this world if they have the problem solving and motivation to keep themselves educated on a wide breadth of topics. Thanks again for your message even though it was not the main purpose of what you were relaying in the video, it happened to mean something to me!
"I don't think I know how to do it."
"Go try or don't get your money" *hangs up*.
Preaching to the choir, Louis. My blood pressure gets high talking to those people. My blood pressure gets even high thinking of those people.
Now that I'm getting older, I have absolutely no patience with these people anymore.
That wasn't an IT specialist... that was a worker drone that was hired to push a few buttons and has no actual clue how any of it works. Guarantee if anything went wrong during install they wouldn't have the first clue where to begin trying to correct the issue.