I too got burned out on on-call work. As a middle-aged semi-single mom, it's just not something I can do much of right now and still function. I ended up in academia in a relatively small shop, where I am informally on call via cell phone without the expectation that I'll bounce up with 15 minute response time 24x7. This suits me fine - I am happy to fix the mail machine if it goes down on a Sunday morning, but I can turn off the phone when I go to bed at night.

Before this, I had one other job with a similar setup , at an engineering firm that didn't really need 24x7 coverage as they only worked days.

So the jobs do exist, but there are trade-offs.

One danger in a small shop can be 24x7 enduser tech support, and people do seem to get your home phone number. And, you're not going to be doing as many fun large scale projects; it's much more about keeping the shop running, doing your own maintenance, interacting with users and customers and management, and other such work. Personally I enjoy this and I'm good at it, but it does mean you have to be very self-motivated to keep your skills and tools up to date.

Sometimes I think that in addition to Junion/Senior/ sysadmin levels, we ought to recognize different "tracks" - systems architecture, tools development, shop management, dba etc. Different senior sysadmin jobs do call for different skill sets.



Betsy Schwartz email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unix Systems Administrator,CRG voice: 617-495-5947
Harvard Graduate School of Design fax: 617-496-5866





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