On 11/30/18 1:43 PM, Evan Koblentz via vcf-midatlantic wrote:
I don't have a fraction of the IT experience that most of you do. I don't pretend otherwise.
And yet you feel you have the knowledge to decide who knows what they're doing and who doesn't, with the sole factor being the size of their employer.
However, as a tech journalist, I've been covering enterprise IT for 20 years. I interview dozens of major corporate CIOs every year.
Pretty much ALL medium/large corporations -- the Fortune 1,000 -- spend thousands or even millions of dollars annually on cloud services/storage.
There are many reasons why they do it. None of those reasons include, "Because they're stupid."
I chuckle a little when I read comments from people who think they know better than all the massive international conglomerates whose budgets fuel the many-billion-dollar cloud computing industry.
It's ok Evan, you can attack me by name, I don't mind. If you recall, the first time you told me that I didn't know what I was talking about because I don't work for a huge corporation was to my face, standing in Building 3, not all that long ago. It's very clear that you equate the size of the business with technical know-how. Everyone here who has worked in this field is probably laughing right now. I'm sure that you do chuckle. But as a journalist, rather than an engineer who has actually worked in that world, you are largely unaware of what the work entails. First, you assume that "massive international conglomerate" means "will always do the right thing". It's clear that being a huge company is really all it takes to earn your respect, but be very careful with that. The larger a company is, the less likely they are to make technical decisions for technical reasons. Do you really think, for example, that Microsoft Windows made inroads into datacenter server roles on its technical merits? Now look at the companies that did it: Almost exclusively huge ones. As an example, when Microsoft came after Digex in the 1990s, for example, knowing that it was a pure-UNIX organization working in a pure-UNIX field, they offered some very enticing bonuses to migrate to Windows in the datacenter. It started out with free OS licensing and discounted support, but then moved on to things like "gifts" for decision-making staff, like island vacations and such. None of their arguments were "this is a better technical solution"; it all amounted to bribes of one sort or another. My point is, in that environment, technical considerations take a back seat to "business" concerns. And business concerns, for very large sales, very frequently involve salesmen schmoozing, bribes, and a bunch of other crap that isn't exactly honorable business behavior. Common, yes...even ubiquitous. But not honorable behavior. Further, massive multinational conglomerates hire people based primarily on H.R. resume keyword searches, and end up with lots of morons. They have to do it that way, on the scale they're operating in. Sure, there are plenty of highly-experienced, knowledgeable people working in those big companies (Dean and Eugene come to mind), but they are far from everyone. Add to that the Peter Principle (people are promoted to their level of incompetence), and you end up knowing why big companies very often make poor technical decisions. Some of them are so laughably bad that they'd destroy a small company, but big companies often end up surviving in spite of themselves, usually on financial inertia alone. I'm explaining this so that you'll understand that your blind faith in the technical astuteness of the staffs of large corporations is misplaced. I know you're not listening. Maybe you'd have listened when I worked for a large corporation. I tried to explain this to you standing in the front of Building 3 a few months ago, and you wouldn't listen then, either. Speaking as someone who was raised by a journalist, a journalist's job involves a lot more listening than making proclamations. I appreciate your point of view, truly I do, but I don't need you to "give me a schoolin'" on how the I.T. industry works or who I should copy my advice from. -Dave -- Dave McGuire, AK4HZ New Kensington, PA