Time Management for System Administrators. Thomas A. Limoncelli

Time Management for System Administrators


Time.Management.for.System.Administrators.pdf
ISBN: 0596007833,9780596007836 | 240 pages | 6 Mb


Download Time Management for System Administrators



Time Management for System Administrators Thomas A. Limoncelli
Publisher: O'Reilly Media




Limoncelli is a great source of both professional ane personal advices. O'Reilly just published Tom Limoncelli's new book on Time Management for System Administrators, which is kind of a simplified techie approach in the same vein as Getting Things Done. It's not easy to comprehend the role of a System Administrator, because that's the person behind the machine. Some days ago Andrea Veri was chosen by the GNOME started his collaboration with the Debian GNOME Team. Either way, you can now remove it from the queue and move on. Otherwise schedule regular time to it. The proliferation of configuration management packages changes that. Users are the system administrator's asset (hey w/o them I will be out of job). Over the years, I've tried few time management and productivity systems. The deep experience Andrea collected while managing both .deb and .rpm packaging systems makes him very comfortable working with different environments. You can use an elaborate evening planner system, computer calendar pages, a wall calendar, workplace calendar, pocket appointments, etc., to do your own planning. Behind the scenes: Andrea Veri, the new GNOME part-time System Administrator. As a UNIX system administrator, I know the importance of time. But not dealing with DRM is really nice. Also, “Time Management for System Administrators” by Thomas A. Tools, such as Puppet and Chef, make it easy for systems administrators to maintain multiple servers at one time and quickly upload information. I recently paid them $20 for an epub of Time Management for System Administrators, versus $10 for the Kindle version from Amazon, and felt a bit silly. What happens without time management. Time is a critical factor in an enterprise computing.