On Sat, Apr 18, 2009 at 10:34 AM, Brian Desmond <[email protected]> wrote:
> I’ve seen quite a few customers where AD ops falls under the security
> umbrella. This is really a management chain discussion in the end.

  Not really AD specific, but: In some of the large aerospace
companies I've dealt with as customers of %DAYJOB%, their management
structure seems to be very distributed.  I suspect this stems from
their history of merges on top of mergers.  So they'll have local IT
and security departments with a fair degree of autonomy, and then
corporate supervision.  Different office locations will have different
"standards".  Makes for interesting an interesting time when you try
and integrate systems.  It appears some offices look to a corporate AD
department, while some have the local guys running their own show.

  And then there's outsourced services, where we can't talk to the
people doing the work, but the people we can talk to don't know
anything.  There's one particular SharePoint "extranet" site we're
supposed to be using.  They've been trying for over a year to get it
to work and they still can't.  But I digress.  :)

  At %DAYJOB%, we only have 120 people, and the IT department is me
and another guy.  If it uses 1s and 0s, it's our responsibility.  (If
it uses electricity and it's greasy or wet, it's maintenance,
otherwise, IT.)  That includes Active Directory.  Also servers,
desktops, networks,  applications, phones, IT security, Internet,
BlackBerry, electronic door locks, printers/scanners/fax... :)

-- Ben

~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
~ <http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/>  ~

Reply via email to