The same as the difference between a nurse and a doctor.. While a nurse might 
feel pretty qualified to do what a doctor does, a doctor is has bigger legal 
boundaries. Consider an AR Administrator as a nurse..

A good AR Administrator may be knowledgeable enough to develop, but its a 
chance you may have to take if you are willing to let them develop a full 
fledged home grown application for you..

Joe



________________________________
From: Roger Justice <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2009 2:46:36 PM
Subject: Re: What's the difference between a Remedy Administrator and a Remedy 
Developer?

** The most important point. "What does the job pay".


-----Original Message-----
From: Benedetto Cantatore <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Wed, Jul 22, 2009 2:43 pm
Subject: Re: What's the difference between a Remedy Administrator and a Remedy 
Developer?


** 
I think Shawn defined it best.  I have administrators that work for me, well on 
their way to being developers, but I wouldn't classify them as a developers... 
yet.  Myself, I develop, but I still add groups, users, categories and all the 
other fun stuff that makes our jobs so much fun.  So a lot of crossover on job 
activities.


Ben Cantatore
Remedy Manager
(914) 457-6209

Emerging Health IT
3 Odell Plaza
Yonkers, New York 10701


>>> [email protected] 07/22/09 12:56 PM >>>

I would generally agree with what everyone else says, but I put it in the 
following way:

If you are talking about a shop that builds custom applications, a Remedy 
developer is someone that can do everything the Remedy administrator role 
requires, plus development work and have a better understanding of log files 
and other aspects of AR System that an administrator may not know.

When it comes to ITSM, the previous idea is thrown out the window, as there are 
multiple levels of administrators (e.g. application vs. ar system 
administration) and development is generally much harder so you can customize 
ITSM without breaking things.  As a result, being a "Remedy Developer" should 
include subcategories for "ARS Developer" and "ITSM Developer".

Shawn Pierson

-----Original Message-----
From: Action Request System discussion list(ARSList) 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Meyer, Jennifer L
Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2009 11:13 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: What's the difference between a Remedy Administrator and a Remedy 
Developer?

I'm going to open up a HUGE can of worms today, just because I can.  I keep 
seeing these hiring requests come in for Administrators OR Developers but not 
both, and every time I do, I think "What the Heck?"

I've been doing software development and administration for better than a 
decade now, and devoted more than eight years of that time to Remedy, and I'm 
still not certain which skills fall into which bucket.

So just for giggles, I'll start a list, and the rest of you add onto it.

Jennifer Meyer


ADMINISTRATOR SKILLS
Server Administration
Database Administration
Install the AR System on the Server
Install the Applications on the Server
Troubleshoot the Installations and Re-Install (Inevitably)
Configure the Applications
Import Data to the Applications
System Performance and Tuning



DEVELOPER SKILLS
Requirements Analysis and Design of proposed workflow changes Modify existing 
applications using the Remedy Administrator Tool Create new forms and workflow 
using the Remedy Administrator Tool Test, Test, and Test form and workflow 
changes Documentation (IMHO underrated and underperformed)




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