That is interesting...
S.M.A.R.T Hard drive monitoring?
Maybe SNMP traps?
He must have a slick setup....hopefully we'll find out soon!
:)
 
 

________________________________

From: mck1012 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, June 05, 2008 8:30 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: General question - Logging onto a user's computer


I think if it is a written policy you should not log in to the
computers. The computers are not the property of the users but they are
also not your property so you need to follow policy. And to know when a
computer is going to crash, I dont know about that one. You are either
trying to hide something or you did something that was going to cause
the computer to crash. I dont think we got the whole story here.




----- Original Message ----
From: Sean Martin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: NT System Admin Issues <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, June 5, 2008 7:56:08 PM
Subject: Re: General question - Logging onto a user's computer


I'm also curious as to how you knew the PC was about to crash. Our
indication of an individual PC crashing is when the user calls to report
it. We've got some 1200+ PCs to manage though. 
 
I'm kind of on the fence on the whole policy issue though. We have the
same policy stating admins are not to remotely administer any "users" PC
without their prior knowledge. The policy is there for confidentiallity
purposes (user may be working on something we're not supposed to see).
However, preventing potential loss of data should be greeted with
thanks, not an a$$ chewing. 
 
- Sean

 
On 6/5/08, Troy Meyer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 

        Steve if you can see crashes before they occur remotely you need
to be making more money.

         

        Perhaps Qwest will hire you, we have had some outages on our
circuit this quarter and it has been a big PITA.

         

        Seriously though, not knowing the entire situation and what is
going on, this sounds like an education issue for the boss and the
users. Does the boss want to except the loss of productivity, if so, you
have to let it go (or find another place to work).  Most cases we aren't
management and policy setters for privacy type concerns and so if you
cant follow what is documented before you, find a place where it isn't
an issue (from someone who has left because of bad management policies)

         

        BTW   Why are they working on stuff all day that can disappear
with one crash?  Please tell me they save intermittently

         

        -troy  

         

         

         

        From: Steve Kelsay [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
        Sent: Thursday, June 05, 2008 4:27 PM
        To: NT System Admin Issues
        Subject: General question - Logging onto a user's computer

         

        I just got reamed for preventing a crash. It irked me, so let me
know what you think, or what your policy is.

         

        Management simply said "It is not acceptable to log into someone
else's computer without their consent."  Period. 

         

        If you see a situation where a crash is about to  occur, do you
just watch because you are trying to identify who is actually using that
workstation at that moment and try to contact them, or do you remote in,
displaying a "Netmgr x has remotely connected to your pc" alert box, and
resolve the issue before they crash and lose a day's work?

         

         

         

         


        

        

        

        

        





~ Upgrade to Next Generation Antispam/Antivirus with Ninja!    ~
~ <http://www.sunbelt-software.com/SunbeltMessagingNinja.cfm>  ~

Reply via email to