4 would be just about right for us, I think. Two for BAU and two for new stuff. Not going to happen, though.... Do more with less, faster.
Sent from my iPhone > On Nov 12, 2015, at 12:26 PM, Marable, Mike <[email protected]> wrote: > > I’ll take a crack here. > We support about 15,000 users, but more importantly we support 30,000+ > machines. > We currently have 4 images: 32bit and 64bit Windows 7 and Windows 10. > Hardware comes from either Dell (up to about 3 years ago) and now HP. > There’s probably about 20+ models we support that cover the majority of our > systems. That being said we do support just about anything and everything > different departments bring in at a very basic level (if it completes the > build sequence, that’s as far as we go). > > My team has 4 people primarily involved in OS deployment. Each of us focuses > on different aspects. > > Mike > > > > >> On 11/12/15, 11:50 AM, "[email protected] on behalf of Joe >> Sestrich" <[email protected] on behalf of >> [email protected]> wrote: >> >> I'm curious what other teams are doing. How many people do you support? How >> many images/OSes? Variety of hardware? >> >> By "imaging", I'm including everything from soup to nuts: >> >> Evaluating new hardware - Benchmark, QA, obtain and add drivers to SCCM/MDT. >> >> Support hardware issues with new features, driver issues, accessory support >> (docking, wireless, Bluetooth, etcetera.) User and tech education. >> >> Manage current OS/base image - add/remove features, icons, look and feel. >> Decide on standards. QA the builds. >> >> Eval new OS'es. Create new base images. Features, icons, look and feel, >> standards, QA as above. >> >> Build and manage the deployments - build task sequences, test on assorted >> hardware. >> >> Build and manage MBAM/Bitlocker deployment. Script TPM activation, MBAM >> install, test and deploy. >> >> Manage replication of deployment solution to production. >> >> 3rd level support for all the above. >> >> The floor is yours... >> >> Sent from my iPhone > ********************************************************** > Electronic Mail is not secure, may not be read every day, and should not be > used for urgent or sensitive issues
