Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-04-08 Thread Jay Hennigan
On 3/30/10 8:26 PM, Steve Bertrand wrote:

 I'd put 'janitor' on my business card for all I really care.

Or on your T-shirt?

Like the ones from NANOG 42 that read Custodians of the Internet?

--
Jay Hennigan - CCIE #7880 - Network Engineering - j...@impulse.net
Impulse Internet Service  -  http://www.impulse.net/
Your local telephone and internet company - 805 884-6323 - WB6RDV



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-04-07 Thread Jeroen van Aart

Lamar Owen wrote:
companies, Official Title is used to determine salary (or even whether you're an 
exempt employee or not).  And the company's bylaws may invest particular 


Unless I misread the laws regarding this, in CA at least you still have 
to earn ~$40/hr or more (it varies and last I read it was lowered a few 
$s) or more to be considered exempt, regardless of your job title





Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-04-07 Thread Larry Sheldon
On 4/7/2010 13:39, Jeroen van Aart wrote:
 Lamar Owen wrote:
 companies, Official Title is used to determine salary (or even whether 
 you're an 
 exempt employee or not).  And the company's bylaws may invest particular 
 
 Unless I misread the laws regarding this, in CA at least you still have 
 to earn ~$40/hr or more (it varies and last I read it was lowered a few 
 $s) or more to be considered exempt, regardless of your job title

When I  was a manager out thee some years ago, you also had to have
substantial control over your activities.

-- 
Democracy: Three wolves and a sheep voting on the dinner menu.

Requiescas in pace o email
Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
Eppure si rinfresca

ICBM Targeting Information:  http://tinyurl.com/4sqczs
http://tinyurl.com/7tp8ml





Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-04-07 Thread Jeroen van Aart

Larry Sheldon wrote:

On 4/7/2010 13:39, Jeroen van Aart wrote:


Unless I misread the laws regarding this, in CA at least you still have 
to earn ~$40/hr or more (it varies and last I read it was lowered a few 
$s) or more to be considered exempt, regardless of your job title



When I  was a manager out thee some years ago, you also had to have
substantial control over your activities.


Yes, and it has to be of a special intellectual nature (for lack of 
better terms). I would think just a fancy job title, but no duties to 
reflect it, would not stand a chance at all if the employee would 
legally challenge their supposedly exempt status.


Anyways, 
http://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/Glossary.asp?Button1=E#employee%20in%20the%20computer%20software%20field

explains it fairly well.

The employee's hourly rate of pay is not less than $41.00 [the rate in 
effect on September 19, 2000]. The rate according to their provided pdf 
is not less than $37.94 or not less than $79050.- annually.


Regards,
Jeroen



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-04-07 Thread Martin Hannigan
On Tue, Mar 30, 2010 at 11:14 PM, Steve Bertrand st...@ibctech.ca wrote:

[ snip ]



 For instance, I like to present myself as a 'network engineer'. I have
 never taken formal education, don't hold any certifications (well, since
 2001), and can't necessarily prove my worth.

 How does the ops community feel about using this designation?


FWIW, I was Commodore of Infrastructure when I worked for the President of
The World.

Hope that's helpful. :-)

Best,

-M



-- 
Martin Hannigan   mar...@theicelandguy.com
p: +16178216079
Power, Network, and Costs Consulting for Iceland Datacenters and Occupants


Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-04-07 Thread Beavis
Nathan,

  CIJ (Chief Internet Janitor) is kinda catchy ;) and this best
describe my line of work. Keeping the company's Internet clean.. or
when a mess is done already.

But at the end of the day regardless of one's fancy title. there is
still the work ... if you love it stay with it.

my 0.002nc



On Tue, Mar 30, 2010 at 9:30 PM, Nathan Ward na...@daork.net wrote:
 On 31/03/2010, at 4:26 PM, Steve Bertrand wrote:

 On 2010.03.30 23:20, Jorge Amodio wrote:
 I'd say that probably around here for those like me that have been in
 operations/engineering management positions we don't give a squat
 about what title your biz card says you have, your actions and
 performance speak by themselves.

 There are no kings around here so titles most of the time are worthless.

 By asking what title may impress others is sort of a -1 to start.

 It isn't about impression.

 I'd put 'janitor' on my business card for all I really care.

 I'm pretty sure Jonny Martin was Chief Internet Janitor in his previous role.

 He cleaned the tubes so the sewage could flow.

 --
 Nathan Ward





-- 
()  ascii ribbon campaign - against html e-mail
/\  www.asciiribbon.org   - against proprietary attachments



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-04-07 Thread Gregory Hicks

 Date: Wed, 07 Apr 2010 11:39:09 -0700
 From: Jeroen van Aart jer...@mompl.net
 To: NANOG list nanog@nanog.org
 Subject: Re: Finding content in your job title
 
 Lamar Owen wrote:
  companies, Official Title is used to determine salary (or even
  whether you're an exempt employee or not).  And the company's
  bylaws may invest particular
 
 Unless I misread the laws regarding this, in CA at least you still
 have to earn ~$40/hr or more (it varies and last I read it was
 lowered a few $s) or more to be considered exempt, regardless of your
 job title

Actually, it doesn't matter how much you make per hour, the deciding
factor between exempt and non-exempt is how many (if any) people you
SUPERVISE.  No supervision of others, then non-exempt.

Now you and the employer may agree to some other definition, but that
is between you and them.

At my previous $DAY_JOB, a technicion who was classified as exempt
took $EMPLOYER to court over back pay, overtime, lunch breaks, et al
and WON.  (He had no direct reports...)

Regards,
Gregory Hicks
-
Gregory Hicks   | Principal Systems Engineer
| Direct:   408.569.7928

People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men
stand ready to do violence on their behalf -- George Orwell

The price of freedom is eternal vigilance.  -- Thomas Jefferson

The best we can hope for concerning the people at large is that they
be properly armed. --Alexander Hamilton




Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-04-07 Thread Owen DeLong

On Apr 7, 2010, at 3:45 PM, Gregory Hicks wrote:

 
 Date: Wed, 07 Apr 2010 11:39:09 -0700
 From: Jeroen van Aart jer...@mompl.net
 To: NANOG list nanog@nanog.org
 Subject: Re: Finding content in your job title
 
 Lamar Owen wrote:
 companies, Official Title is used to determine salary (or even
 whether you're an exempt employee or not).  And the company's
 bylaws may invest particular
 
 Unless I misread the laws regarding this, in CA at least you still
 have to earn ~$40/hr or more (it varies and last I read it was
 lowered a few $s) or more to be considered exempt, regardless of your
 job title
 
 Actually, it doesn't matter how much you make per hour, the deciding
 factor between exempt and non-exempt is how many (if any) people you
 SUPERVISE.  No supervision of others, then non-exempt.
 
That is not entirely correct.  The actual text of the law, IIRC, reads to the
effect of Work which is primarily intellectual or managerial in nature...

In other words, if you are management _OR_ some form of technical
professional.  Most of the technical individual contributors I know that
are in the 6-figure realm are exempt.

You can find California Guidance on this matter here:

http://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/faq_OvertimeExemptions.htm

More information is available here:

http://www.management-advantage.com/products/overtime-exempt.html

For further information, refer to the California Labor Code, near section 515.
(515.5 applies to this industry)

Other states may vary.

Owen




Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-04-07 Thread Larry Sheldon
On 4/7/2010 17:45, Gregory Hicks wrote:

 Actually, it doesn't matter how much you make per hour, the deciding
 factor between exempt and non-exempt is how many (if any) people you
 SUPERVISE.  No supervision of others, then non-exempt.


I don't think that is correct.  Professionals do not supervise people
but if the substantial control their own activities and make above a
certain level in total compensation, they may be exempt.

 
 Now you and the employer may agree to some other definition, but that
 is between you and them.
 
 At my previous $DAY_JOB, a technicion who was classified as exempt
 took $EMPLOYER to court over back pay, overtime, lunch breaks, et al
 and WON.  (He had no direct reports...)

He probably failed the compensation test, or more likely, did not
control his own activities.

-- 
Democracy: Three wolves and a sheep voting on the dinner menu.

Requiescas in pace o email
Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
Eppure si rinfresca

ICBM Targeting Information:  http://tinyurl.com/4sqczs
http://tinyurl.com/7tp8ml





Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-04-07 Thread Steven Bellovin

On Apr 7, 2010, at 4:28 32PM, Martin Hannigan wrote:

 On Tue, Mar 30, 2010 at 11:14 PM, Steve Bertrand st...@ibctech.ca wrote:
 
 [ snip ]
 
 
 
 For instance, I like to present myself as a 'network engineer'. I have
 never taken formal education, don't hold any certifications (well, since
 2001), and can't necessarily prove my worth.
 
 How does the ops community feel about using this designation?
 
 
 FWIW, I was Commodore of Infrastructure when I worked for the President of
 The World.

Way back when, an organization I know of decided to regularize its titles and 
insisted that the computer center staff suggest proper titles.  They didn't 
much like Bit Pusher or Telecommunications Bit Pusher, but finally gave up 
when one woman insisted that her proper title was Empress of the 8th Floor.

--Steve Bellovin, http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb








Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-04-02 Thread Jimi Thompson



On 3/31/10 8:14 PM, Jorge Amodio jmamo...@gmail.com wrote:

 I agree with the misuse of the term Engineer in IT. I think it should only
 be used for the official protected title of civil engineer. Which I
 believe is a very respectable job. Sad but true, in IT too many people have
 some form of engineer in their job title but are almost totally clueless.
 
 [ X-Operational_Content = 0 ]
 
 Can't resist.
 
 When I read your message it brought back to my memory a nice guy that
 used to work for me eons ago, very clever, smart and hands-on, he had
 a Bachelor's Degree in Psychology.
 
 One day, we had some sort of outage and I found him in the computer
 room sitting in front of one of the racks with some routing gear, I
 still have that image in my memory he looked like he was doing some
 sort of group therapy with the routers, I couldn't resist and told him
 Hey Joey, Freud won't help you, get your butt off of the chair and
 follow the default procedure, power cycle the damn beast.
 
 There were also several folks with various degrees in Physics, experts
 on blowing up stuff.
 
 Again, IMHO, in this field a title may help or may provide others a
 relative idea where you fit in a large organization, or help the HR
 folks know how much to put on your paycheck or what kind of
 benefits/perks go associated with that level, but I still believe that
 substance is more important.
 
 Regards
 Jorge
 COOK
 Chief Old Operations Knucklehead
 

HAH!  My self chosen job title is Chief Pest, Annoyer of Developers, and
Destroyer of Misconceptions.  All in all, it's fairly accurate.  Among other
things I manage a team of developers, I often have to disabuse management of
some silly idea or other, and frequently have to play gladfly to enable
change.  





RE: Finding content in your job title

2010-04-02 Thread Justin Horstman
-Original Message-
From: Jimi Thompson [mailto:jimi.thomp...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Friday, April 02, 2010 9:20 AM
To: Jorge Amodio; Jeroen van Aart
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Finding content in your job title




On 3/31/10 8:14 PM, Jorge Amodio jmamo...@gmail.com wrote:

 I agree with the misuse of the term Engineer in IT. I think it 
 should only be used for the official protected title of civil 
 engineer. Which I believe is a very respectable job. Sad but true, in 
 IT too many people have some form of engineer in their job title but are 
 almost totally clueless.
 
 [ X-Operational_Content = 0 ]
 
 Can't resist.
 
 When I read your message it brought back to my memory a nice guy that 
 used to work for me eons ago, very clever, smart and hands-on, he had 
 a Bachelor's Degree in Psychology.
 
 One day, we had some sort of outage and I found him in the computer 
 room sitting in front of one of the racks with some routing gear, I 
 still have that image in my memory he looked like he was doing some 
 sort of group therapy with the routers, I couldn't resist and told him 
 Hey Joey, Freud won't help you, get your butt off of the chair and 
 follow the default procedure, power cycle the damn beast.
 
 There were also several folks with various degrees in Physics, experts 
 on blowing up stuff.
 
 Again, IMHO, in this field a title may help or may provide others a 
 relative idea where you fit in a large organization, or help the HR 
 folks know how much to put on your paycheck or what kind of 
 benefits/perks go associated with that level, but I still believe that 
 substance is more important.
 
 Regards
 Jorge
 COOK
 Chief Old Operations Knucklehead
 

HAH!  My self chosen job title is Chief Pest, Annoyer of Developers, and 
Destroyer of Misconceptions.  All in all, it's fairly accurate.  Among other 
things I manage a team of developers, I often have to disabuse management of 
some silly idea or other, and  frequently have to play gladfly to enable 
change.  

When I call a company and ask for an accountant, I get the companies 
accountant, when I ask for an account manager, that's what I get. That's what 
titles are, and that's why they are important. I know the type of person I need 
to talk to, but I don't know who it is I need to talk to. Its why 
standardization in titles is good, when I go digging through my pile of 
business cards looking for the Network Engineer/Architect at company X, I'll 
probably not notice a custom/weird title. It does not define you, it does not 
make you any less or more important, it does however answer the question of 
Who is responsible for... which I believe to be extremely valuable.

Then again, I might be weird.

~J




Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-04-02 Thread Lamar Owen
On Friday 02 April 2010 12:25:12 pm Justin Horstman wrote:
 [Your title] does
 however answer the question of Who is responsible for... which I believe
 to be extremely valuable.

 Then again, I might be weird.

No, this is exactly how 'business at large' uses the idea of title.  In some 
companies, Official Title is used to determine salary (or even whether you're 
an 
exempt employee or not).  And the company's bylaws may invest particular 
responsibilities and privileges on particular people by title.  Secretary, for 
instance, is a particular title used in bylaws for a particular purpose for an 
officer of the company.

When troubleshooting an operational issue, which do you prefer: traceroutes 
with useful interface names (so you can locate them) or cutesy names?  Would 
you prefer (for your eyes, of course; you do run split DNS, right?) POS1/0 on 
a 7206 used for PE in the data center be called pos1-0.dc1-7206-
pe.example.com, or bhp.example.com (BHP=Big Honking Pipe)?  I know, you might 
prefer bhp.example.com for other people's eyes, but suppose you didn't name it 
that, you're new on the job, the guy who named it is not available, and you 
are having problems.  Then which is your preference?

I guess what you want your title to be depends on what your role actually is 
in the company, and whether someone outside (or someone inside who doesn't 
know you) can find you when they need to using the company's directory or a 
second or third-hand business card (yes, I've done that too, make a photocopy 
or e-copy of a business card, and then pass it along to a third-party (after 
getting card holder's permission to do so) as a contact).  Or when putting a 
card under the acrylic sheeting on the tables in a local restaurant (I've 
actually made useful connections reading the business cards on corkboards and 
under the Plexiglas at restaurants before).

We have standardized abuse, postmaster, and webmaster e-mail aliases, too, and 
that works when you see a slow brute-forcer originating from somewhere, or 
someone has blackholed someone and their BGP announcements leak, or whatever.  
It's nice to get to the right person when you don't know the person, don't 
know the company, and don't have time to get 'into' the culture.

So, I guess that your title should at least semi-adequately give your role to 
someone who is completely clueless about your role.



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-04-01 Thread Jorge Amodio
I remember in the ol'days when everybody was fighting to have the
postmaster title ...

It was often associated with the possession of the root password, you
had to feel the power !!!

Cheers
Jorge



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-04-01 Thread Brian Raaen
Did that mean that your job was to ensure that the guillotine was sharpened 
and engineered securely?

-- 

--

Brian Raaen
Network Engineer
bra...@zcorum.com


On Wednesday 31 March 2010, Jens Link wrote:
 Steve Bertrand st...@ibctech.ca writes:
 
  For instance, I like to present myself as a 'network engineer'. I have
  never taken formal education, don't hold any certifications (well, since
  2001), and can't necessarily prove my worth.
 
 Hey, network engineer is good. Some time back someone gave me the title 
 senior executioner security engineer. They even send a document to a
 customer with this title. 
 
 Jens
 -- 
 -
 | Foelderichstr. 40   | 13595 Berlin, Germany| +49-151-18721264 |
 | http://blog.quux.de | jabber: jensl...@guug.de | ---  | 
 -
 
 




Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-31 Thread Ulf Zimmermann
On Tue, Mar 30, 2010 at 11:14:52PM -0400, Steve Bertrand wrote:
 Hi all,
 
 This is perhaps a rather silly question, but one that I'd like to have
 answered.
 
 I'm young in the game, and over the years I've imagined numerous job
 titles that should go on my business card. They went from cool, to
 high-priority, to plain unimaginable.
 
 Now, after 10 years, I reflect back on what I've done, and what I do
 now. To me, if a business is loose-knit with no clear job descriptions
 or titles (ie. too small to have CXO etc), I feel that a business card
 should reflect what one feels is the primary job responsibility, or what
 they do the most (or love the most).
 
 For instance, I like to present myself as a 'network engineer'. I have
 never taken formal education, don't hold any certifications (well, since
 2001), and can't necessarily prove my worth.
 
 How does the ops community feel about using this designation? Is it
 intrusive or offensive to those who hold real engineering degrees? I'm
 content with 'network manager', given that I still do perform (in my
 sleep) numerous system tasks and have to sometimes deal with front-line
 helpdesk stuff.
 
 Instead of acting like I'm trying to sell myself out, I'll leave out
 what I actually do and ask those who sig themselves with 'network
 engineer' what they do day-to-day to acquire that title, and if they
 feel comfortable with having it.
 
 Steve

I solve that problem this way:

1 set of Business cards with Senior System Architect, an arbitary title
the company gave me at some point

1 set of Business cards with Senior Monkey for almost everything 

-- 
Regards, Ulf.

-
Ulf Zimmermann, 1525 Pacific Ave., Alameda, CA-94501, #: 510-865-0204
You can find my resume at: http://www.Alameda.net/~ulf/resume.html



RE: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-31 Thread George Bonser


 -Original Message-
 From: Steve Bertrand [mailto:st...@ibctech.ca]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 30, 2010 8:15 PM
 To: nanog@nanog.org  nanog list
 Subject: Finding content in your job title


 How does the ops community feel about using this designation? Is it
 intrusive or offensive to those who hold real engineering degrees? I'm
 content with 'network manager', given that I still do perform (in my
 sleep) numerous system tasks and have to sometimes deal with
front-line
 helpdesk stuff.

I don't think it matters so much what you call yourself, but what job
role are you filling in the corporate org chart?  You might not be a
degreed engineer but if you are serving as the company's Network
Engineer then that is what you are.  I would say that would go as long
as the title is on a company business card and not a personal card.  I
would say that I would use the term engineer on a personal card only
if I were an engineer in my field of practice by certification or
degree.  In a company, though, my title is the role I fill within the
organization.

I tend to prefer the architect designation mainly because it describes
what I really do.  I design the network, specify the equipment, get it
all running, and am then happy to turn over the day to day operation to
someone else provided there is a someone else to do it.  My title within
my organization is Senior Network Engineer but I personally see my role
as Senior Network Architect and is what I would put on a personal card
and is how I self identify.

George




Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-31 Thread Andrew Mulholland
On Wed, Mar 31, 2010 at 3:14 AM, Steve Bertrand st...@ibctech.ca wrote:
 Hi all,

 This is perhaps a rather silly question, but one that I'd like to have
 answered.

 I'm young in the game, and over the years I've imagined numerous job
 titles that should go on my business card. They went from cool, to
 high-priority, to plain unimaginable.


My approach is not to put job title on the business cards.

There's no need. :)



RE: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-31 Thread Olsen, Jason
 From: Steve Bertrand [mailto:st...@ibctech.ca]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 30, 2010 10:15 PM
 Subject: Finding content in your job title
 
 For instance, I like to present myself as a 'network engineer'. I have
 never taken formal education, don't hold any certifications (well,
 since 2001), and can't necessarily prove my worth.
 
 How does the ops community feel about using this designation? Is it
 intrusive or offensive to those who hold real engineering degrees? I'm
 
 Instead of acting like I'm trying to sell myself out, I'll leave out
 what I actually do and ask those who sig themselves with 'network
 engineer' what they do day-to-day to acquire that title, and if they
 feel comfortable with having it.

I have Senior Network Engineer as my title.  I have an undergraduate
degree in networked communications and management.  When working some
days or on some projects, like when I'm laying out a whole new
datacenter for $EMPLOYER, I feel that I'm filling the role admirably.
Other days, when I'm simply pushing paper or stamping license plates
(small, repetitive tasks of little import) I don't feel that I really
deserve the title.

But then, if I had my druthers, I'd put Chief Bit-mover on my business
card (the CIO's secretary put the kabash on when I tried it, citing
something about executives not much liking it when non-officers put
Chief anything on their cards... ;) )

-JFO




Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-31 Thread D'Arcy J.M. Cain
On Wed, 31 Mar 2010 01:19:26 -0400
Joe jbfixu...@gmail.com wrote:
 short the last business card I handed out simply had the title MIS Dept. Its

Heh.  Reminds me of the place I worked where the least knowledgeable,
least experienced and least liked person was put in charge of MIS.  If
anyone had actually liked the guy they would have explained why signing
all his emails as MIS Manager was a bad idea.  Too funny.

-- 
D'Arcy J.M. Cain da...@druid.net |  Democracy is three wolves
http://www.druid.net/darcy/|  and a sheep voting on
+1 416 425 1212 (DoD#0082)(eNTP)   |  what's for dinner.



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-31 Thread Laurens Vets

This is perhaps a rather silly question, but one that I'd like to have
answered.

I'm young in the game, and over the years I've imagined numerous job
titles that should go on my business card. They went from cool, to
high-priority, to plain unimaginable.

Now, after 10 years, I reflect back on what I've done, and what I do
now. To me, if a business is loose-knit with no clear job descriptions
or titles (ie. too small to have CXO etc), I feel that a business card
should reflect what one feels is the primary job responsibility, or what
they do the most (or love the most).

For instance, I like to present myself as a 'network engineer'. I have
never taken formal education, don't hold any certifications (well, since
2001), and can't necessarily prove my worth.

How does the ops community feel about using this designation? Is it
intrusive or offensive to those who hold real engineering degrees? I'm
content with 'network manager', given that I still do perform (in my
sleep) numerous system tasks and have to sometimes deal with front-line
helpdesk stuff.

Instead of acting like I'm trying to sell myself out, I'll leave out
what I actually do and ask those who sig themselves with 'network
engineer' what they do day-to-day to acquire that title, and if they
feel comfortable with having it.



When the University I worked for went all touchy-feely and told us to
pick titles for ourselves I wanted to use Savant.

They wouldn't let me, so I tried Jack Of All Trades.

Vetoed.

So I just stayed with the cards I had that said Associate Director for
Telecommunications and Computers.

Which is about as void of meaning then and now as anything I have ever
heard of.


I actually held the title Super Security Engineer at my previous 
company according to my business cards.  Now that I think of it, I need 
new business cards, any ideas? :)




Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-31 Thread Leo Bicknell
In a message written on Tue, Mar 30, 2010 at 11:14:52PM -0400, Steve Bertrand 
wrote:
 Now, after 10 years, I reflect back on what I've done, and what I do
 now. To me, if a business is loose-knit with no clear job descriptions
 or titles (ie. too small to have CXO etc), I feel that a business card
 should reflect what one feels is the primary job responsibility, or what
 they do the most (or love the most).

A /business card/ should reflect how you want those outside of your
company to classify you.  For instance, you may be Head Coder,
Operations Manager, and Chief Kitchen Cleaner, but when you go to
Nanog you hand out cards that say Peering Coordinator because you
want people to know to e-mail you for peering.  Having them know
you are Chief Kitchen Cleaner is of no value.

This is also why many people have more than one set of business cards.
The NANOG Peering Coordinator may be the IETF Protocol Architect.

This is also different from your offical title, that is what
appears on your HR paperwork.  That is relevant to your resume/cv,
because if someone calls to check and see if you really were CTO,
it's HR who is going to say yes or no.

 How does the ops community feel about using this designation? Is it
 intrusive or offensive to those who hold real engineering degrees? I'm
 content with 'network manager', given that I still do perform (in my
 sleep) numerous system tasks and have to sometimes deal with front-line
 helpdesk stuff.

Engineer by it self doesn't imply certification to me.  Those
with Engineering certifications are typically a P.E., which just
like M.D. or PhD mean something specific.  Civil Engineer implies
nothing to me, Bob Smith, P.E. does.

Thus I am ok with someone calling themselves a Network Engineer.
You can then also be Bob Smith, CCIE or Bob Smith, JNCIE if you
feel you need to be certified in some way.

-- 
   Leo Bicknell - bickn...@ufp.org - CCIE 3440
PGP keys at http://www.ufp.org/~bicknell/


pgpHlQuTkIgSg.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-31 Thread Roland Perry
In article 
r2i877585b01003310746z930ef004w54e76adc3ca3...@mail.gmail.com, Michael 
Dillon wavetos...@googlemail.com writes



Be careful where you get the examples to model yourself upon.
For instance, you are in Canada and I think it is actually illegal
to call yourself and engineer unless you are licenced. And as
far as I know there is no licencing available for network engineers.


Licenced by the Canadian authorities? Here in the UK we have 
Institutes, such as IEEE, where membership can convey some 
authenticity to the title of 'Chartered Engineer'. But anyone can be a 
normal engineer (even people like me with a Masters in Engineering, but 
never bothered to apply to IEEE).

--
Roland Perry



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-31 Thread Valdis . Kletnieks
On Tue, 30 Mar 2010 23:14:52 EDT, Steve Bertrand said:

 For instance, I like to present myself as a 'network engineer'. I have
 never taken formal education, don't hold any certifications (well, since
 2001), and can't necessarily prove my worth.

Our payroll system was overhauled a few years ago, and  it now claims I'm an
IT Spec III, but provides for an alternate working title.  I couldn't get
Utility Infielder on my business card, so I kept the business cards that
still say Computer Systems Senior Engineer.  I don't go through cards very
fast. ;)

One of my cohorts prefers the term Mutagen. :)

I've had the occasional whinge from pedants that complain that 'Engineer' is a
controlled term and the state should take action on my use of it, and I point
out to them (a) not in my field, yet, and (b) it was the Commonwealth of
Virginia that *gave* me the title so they should feel free to take it up
with the guys in Richmond.



pgpqrMJIG0yX9.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-31 Thread Justin M. Streiner

On Tue, 30 Mar 2010, Steve Bertrand wrote:


I'm young in the game, and over the years I've imagined numerous job
titles that should go on my business card. They went from cool, to
high-priority, to plain unimaginable.

Now, after 10 years, I reflect back on what I've done, and what I do
now. To me, if a business is loose-knit with no clear job descriptions
or titles (ie. too small to have CXO etc), I feel that a business card
should reflect what one feels is the primary job responsibility, or what
they do the most (or love the most).


Smaller shops might be more willing to let people choose their own titles 
for their business cards.  A friend presented himself as Lord of the 
Underworld when he ran his own company.


At my previous job, the title on my business card was either network 
engineer or senior network engineer, and that was pretty accurate, in 
the sense that most people here would probably agree that the network 
engineer is a pretty vague title that covers many different 
responsibilities.  Bigger companies often put a framework of job 
classifications and titles in place to simplify HR/administrative items 
like salary ranges and reporting structures.  I currently work at a 
larger organization where my business card says network analyst even 
though I work in the network engineering group, and my job classification 
is systems programmer IV even though I don't do any systems programming. 
I don't consider writing the occasional shell/perl/python script to be 
systems programming :)



For instance, I like to present myself as a 'network engineer'. I have
never taken formal education, don't hold any certifications (well, since
2001), and can't necessarily prove my worth.


I don't hold any certs at the moment either, but I can prove my worth to 
an organization through my work experience and business knowledge.  The 
are certs worth it horse has been pretty well beaten to death several 
times here and on other forums.



How does the ops community feel about using this designation? Is it
intrusive or offensive to those who hold real engineering degrees? I'm
content with 'network manager', given that I still do perform (in my
sleep) numerous system tasks and have to sometimes deal with front-line
helpdesk stuff.


Engineering implies different things to different people.  I don't 
worry about offending a degreed engineer any more than I worry about 
offending someone who drives a train.  I had a boss at a previous job herd 
all of the systems and network engineers in the conference room and give 
us the YOU ARE NOT ENGINEERS BECAUSE YOU DO NOT HAVE AN ENGINEERING 
DEGREE browbeating after some sort of an outage.  He didn't last very 
long :)


jms



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-31 Thread Jim Mercer
On Tue, Mar 30, 2010 at 10:34:58PM -0500, Jorge Amodio wrote:
 Ok, let see. In several countries the use of the title engineer
 applies to people that achieved a certain technical degree, I'm not
 sure that applies uniformly but in Latin America using the engineer
 title without having achieved that degree is illegal.

when i worked for LSUC, the equivilent of a state bar association, i think,
i was asked to dream up a new title for my role, and asked for
Network Architect.

it was rejected for the reason that it bestowes upon you a professional
designation for which you are not qualified.

i think my title ended up being Systems and Network Engineering Manager.

-- 
Jim Mercerj...@reptiles.org+92 336 520-4504
I'm Prime Minister of Canada, I live here and I'm going to take a leak.
   - Lester Pearson in 1967, during a meeting between himself and
President Lyndon Johnson, whose Secret Service detail had taken over
Pearson's cottage retreat.  At one point, a Johnson guard asked
Pearson, Who are you and where are you going?



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-31 Thread D'Arcy J.M. Cain
On Wed, 31 Mar 2010 12:12:46 -0400
Jim Mercer j...@reptiles.org wrote:
 i think my title ended up being Systems and Network Engineering Manager.

So you were the SANE Manager?

-- 
D'Arcy J.M. Cain da...@druid.net |  Democracy is three wolves
http://www.druid.net/darcy/|  and a sheep voting on
+1 416 425 1212 (DoD#0082)(eNTP)   |  what's for dinner.



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-31 Thread George Imburgia


On Wed, 31 Mar 2010, valdis.kletni...@vt.edu wrote:


I've had the occasional whinge from pedants that complain that 'Engineer' is a
controlled term and the state should take action on my use of it, and I point
out to them (a) not in my field, yet, and (b) it was the Commonwealth of
Virginia that *gave* me the title so they should feel free to take it up
with the guys in Richmond.


Good point. A title assigned by a government agency is probably most 
appropriate.


Cheers,
George
Person of Interest




Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-31 Thread Jorge Amodio
Perhaps the appropriate approach if the title is internet related is
to call for a BoF at IETF, setup a WG to work on a standards titles
draft, get it published as an RFC, vest the authority on IANA and
start a PDP at ICANN to determine who can obtain and ware the title
and how much has to pay for it.

Now thinking it through, this may be something we can ask the ITU to
do instead of trying to get into the internet standards and
non-governance of the internet, I'm sure they will probably after a
couple of years will come out with the pink book of titles
recommendations that will be uniformly accepted and implemented around
the world including developing countries.

Need a beer

Jorge


On Wed, Mar 31, 2010 at 12:32 PM, George Imburgia
na...@armorfirewall.com wrote:

 On Wed, 31 Mar 2010, valdis.kletni...@vt.edu wrote:

 I've had the occasional whinge from pedants that complain that 'Engineer'
 is a
 controlled term and the state should take action on my use of it, and I
 point
 out to them (a) not in my field, yet, and (b) it was the Commonwealth of
 Virginia that *gave* me the title so they should feel free to take it up
 with the guys in Richmond.

 Good point. A title assigned by a government agency is probably most
 appropriate.

 Cheers,
 George
 Person of Interest



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-31 Thread Randy Bush
if it was not so long, and if jp biz processes were not so confusing to
clueless gaijin, i would ask for just another bozo on this bus

randy



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-31 Thread Jens Link
Steve Bertrand st...@ibctech.ca writes:

 For instance, I like to present myself as a 'network engineer'. I have
 never taken formal education, don't hold any certifications (well, since
 2001), and can't necessarily prove my worth.

Hey, network engineer is good. Some time back someone gave me the title 
senior executioner security engineer. They even send a document to a
customer with this title. 

Jens
-- 
-
| Foelderichstr. 40   | 13595 Berlin, Germany| +49-151-18721264 |
| http://blog.quux.de | jabber: jensl...@guug.de | ---  | 
-



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-31 Thread Oliver Gorwits
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On 31/03/2010 08:32, Andrew Mulholland wrote:
 On Wed, Mar 31, 2010 at 3:14 AM, Steve Bertrand st...@ibctech.ca wrote:
 I'm young in the game, and over the years I've imagined numerous job
 titles that should go on my business card. They went from cool, to
 high-priority, to plain unimaginable.

 
 My approach is not to put job title on the business cards.

Totally agree.

After my employer started changing their mind over whether we are
programmers, analysts, officers, etc, I just dropped the title from
the card.

By the time I'm handing the card out, the recipient already knows my
status.

- -- 
Oliver Gorwits, Network and Telecommunications Group,
Oxford University Computing Services
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v1.4.9 (Darwin)
Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org/

iEYEARECAAYFAkuzxkkACgkQ2NPq7pwWBt4DkACfW5XU4l/bS1wfE/CmoZoL1We2
YgoAoLLPKvYjxfLMYNU2vICzDxef6Emp
=7fL+
-END PGP SIGNATURE-



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-31 Thread Larry Stites
Finding content in my job title... hmm maybe I can change mine to 'Gopher'.
(Go-pher, Go Fer, as in Going For, to get, fetch...)

Speak to me in 'engineer-ese' : (functionality) : I interpret and 'go for'
the hardware that fills the requirement.

Come to think of it maybe that's a good name for a corporation; Gopher IT.

(Ducks back down hole avoiding various projectiles)


~.~
 

Best regards,


Larry E. Stites
Critical Asset Manager
Northern California Networks, Inc.
(Gopher IT, Inc?)
..

on 3/30/10 8:14 PM, Steve Bertrand wrote:

 Hi all,
 
 This is perhaps a rather silly question, but one that I'd like to have
 answered.
 
 I'm young in the game, and over the years I've imagined numerous job
 titles that should go on my business card. They went from cool, to
 high-priority, to plain unimaginable.
 
 Now, after 10 years, I reflect back on what I've done, and what I do
 now. To me, if a business is loose-knit with no clear job descriptions
 or titles (ie. too small to have CXO etc), I feel that a business card
 should reflect what one feels is the primary job responsibility, or what
 they do the most (or love the most).
 
 For instance, I like to present myself as a 'network engineer'. I have
 never taken formal education, don't hold any certifications (well, since
 2001), and can't necessarily prove my worth.
 
 How does the ops community feel about using this designation? Is it
 intrusive or offensive to those who hold real engineering degrees? I'm
 content with 'network manager', given that I still do perform (in my
 sleep) numerous system tasks and have to sometimes deal with front-line
 helpdesk stuff.
 
 Instead of acting like I'm trying to sell myself out, I'll leave out
 what I actually do and ask those who sig themselves with 'network
 engineer' what they do day-to-day to acquire that title, and if they
 feel comfortable with having it.
 
 Steve
 
 
 
 
 
 

~.~
 

Best regards,


Larry E. Stites
Acquisitions and Sales
Northern California Networks, Inc.
CA LIC#04 SR KH 100-484111
Nevada City, Calif. 95959
cell 530 320 4194 ~ land 530 265 2588








Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-31 Thread Jeroen van Aart

Larry Sheldon wrote:

So I just stayed with the cards I had that said Associate Director for
Telecommunications and Computers.


That's nice, so you can call yourself a Director ;-)

What's up with the overuse of the term President in job titles, Vice 
President of Engineering, Product Management... often these people 
appear to not have any real corporate presidential powers... Maybe it's 
because receptionists and secretaries are now called office managers and 
so the managers feel their title has become inflated.


I agree with the misuse of the term Engineer in IT. I think it should 
only be used for the official protected title of civil engineer. Which 
I believe is a very respectable job. Sad but true, in IT too many people 
have some form of engineer in their job title but are almost totally 
clueless.



Which is about as void of meaning then and now as anything I have ever
heard of.


What happened to titles such as programmer (or code monkey if your 
prefer, maybe a PC issue?), network administrator, systems 
administrator, systems analyst, information analyst?


Greetings,
Jeroen





Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-31 Thread Jorge Amodio
 I agree with the misuse of the term Engineer in IT. I think it should only
 be used for the official protected title of civil engineer. Which I
 believe is a very respectable job. Sad but true, in IT too many people have
 some form of engineer in their job title but are almost totally clueless.

[ X-Operational_Content = 0 ]

Can't resist.

When I read your message it brought back to my memory a nice guy that
used to work for me eons ago, very clever, smart and hands-on, he had
a Bachelor's Degree in Psychology.

One day, we had some sort of outage and I found him in the computer
room sitting in front of one of the racks with some routing gear, I
still have that image in my memory he looked like he was doing some
sort of group therapy with the routers, I couldn't resist and told him
Hey Joey, Freud won't help you, get your butt off of the chair and
follow the default procedure, power cycle the damn beast.

There were also several folks with various degrees in Physics, experts
on blowing up stuff.

Again, IMHO, in this field a title may help or may provide others a
relative idea where you fit in a large organization, or help the HR
folks know how much to put on your paycheck or what kind of
benefits/perks go associated with that level, but I still believe that
substance is more important.

Regards
Jorge
COOK
Chief Old Operations Knucklehead



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-31 Thread Jeroen van Aart

Larry Stites wrote:

Come to think of it maybe that's a good name for a corporation; Gopher IT.


That would unnecessarily confuse us 1 and a half human who still use 
gopher. :-(




Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-31 Thread Justin M. Streiner

On Wed, 31 Mar 2010, Jeroen van Aart wrote:

What happened to titles such as programmer (or code monkey if your prefer, 
maybe a PC issue?), network administrator, systems administrator, systems 
analyst, information analyst?


Those titles still exist, but after you read enough job postings for 
network administrator, network manager, or network engineer you 
might not remember what they meant to you originally because HR people are 
generally not tech-savvy, or jobs have to be posted in classification 
buckets that don't fit very well.  I've seen more job postings than I care 
to count that asked for a network engineer, but the closest duty the job 
actually called for was someone who knows how to manage Exchange and 
Active Directory.


jms



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-30 Thread bmanning
On Tue, Mar 30, 2010 at 11:14:52PM -0400, Steve Bertrand wrote:
 Hi all,
 
 This is perhaps a rather silly question, but one that I'd like to have
 answered.
 
 I'm young in the game, and over the years I've imagined numerous job
 titles that should go on my business card. They went from cool, to
 high-priority, to plain unimaginable.
 
 Now, after 10 years, I reflect back on what I've done, and what I do
 now. To me, if a business is loose-knit with no clear job descriptions
 or titles (ie. too small to have CXO etc), I feel that a business card
 should reflect what one feels is the primary job responsibility, or what
 they do the most (or love the most).
 
 For instance, I like to present myself as a 'network engineer'. I have
 never taken formal education, don't hold any certifications (well, since
 2001), and can't necessarily prove my worth.
 
 How does the ops community feel about using this designation? Is it
 intrusive or offensive to those who hold real engineering degrees? I'm
 content with 'network manager', given that I still do perform (in my
 sleep) numerous system tasks and have to sometimes deal with front-line
 helpdesk stuff.
 
 Instead of acting like I'm trying to sell myself out, I'll leave out
 what I actually do and ask those who sig themselves with 'network
 engineer' what they do day-to-day to acquire that title, and if they
 feel comfortable with having it.
 
 Steve
 

well, there are communities which use the term engineer
as a term of art adn frown on this group co-opting the
term network enginer ... maybe you really don't want to
go there (even if it is what you do).

I've used memorable terms in the past, gadfly, plumber, chief 
bottle-washer, and have seen goddess, evangelist, and more.

--bill



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-30 Thread Nathan Ward
On 31/03/2010, at 4:26 PM, Steve Bertrand wrote:

 On 2010.03.30 23:20, Jorge Amodio wrote:
 I'd say that probably around here for those like me that have been in
 operations/engineering management positions we don't give a squat
 about what title your biz card says you have, your actions and
 performance speak by themselves.
 
 There are no kings around here so titles most of the time are worthless.
 
 By asking what title may impress others is sort of a -1 to start.
 
 It isn't about impression.
 
 I'd put 'janitor' on my business card for all I really care.

I'm pretty sure Jonny Martin was Chief Internet Janitor in his previous role.

He cleaned the tubes so the sewage could flow.

--
Nathan Ward



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-30 Thread Steve Bertrand
On 2010.03.30 23:22, bmann...@vacation.karoshi.com wrote:
 On Tue, Mar 30, 2010 at 11:14:52PM -0400, Steve Bertrand wrote:
 Hi all,

 This is perhaps a rather silly question, but one that I'd like to have
 answered.

 I'm young in the game, and over the years I've imagined numerous job
 titles that should go on my business card. They went from cool, to
 high-priority, to plain unimaginable.

 Now, after 10 years, I reflect back on what I've done, and what I do
 now. To me, if a business is loose-knit with no clear job descriptions
 or titles (ie. too small to have CXO etc), I feel that a business card
 should reflect what one feels is the primary job responsibility, or what
 they do the most (or love the most).

 For instance, I like to present myself as a 'network engineer'. I have
 never taken formal education, don't hold any certifications (well, since
 2001), and can't necessarily prove my worth.

 How does the ops community feel about using this designation? Is it
 intrusive or offensive to those who hold real engineering degrees? I'm
 content with 'network manager', given that I still do perform (in my
 sleep) numerous system tasks and have to sometimes deal with front-line
 helpdesk stuff.

 Instead of acting like I'm trying to sell myself out, I'll leave out
 what I actually do and ask those who sig themselves with 'network
 engineer' what they do day-to-day to acquire that title, and if they
 feel comfortable with having it.

 Steve

 
   well, there are communities which use the term engineer
   as a term of art adn frown on this group co-opting the
   term network enginer ... maybe you really don't want to
   go there (even if it is what you do).
 
   I've used memorable terms in the past, gadfly, plumber, chief 
   bottle-washer, and have seen goddess, evangelist, and more.

heh.

Plumber is good. Electrician would be better considering I'm about 120
hours away from writing my resi ticket ;)

I did not mean to initiate a thread that turns into a joke. I'm quite
serious. I guess I'm curious to get an understanding from others who
work in a small environment that have no choice but to 'classify'
themselves.

Steve



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-30 Thread Jorge Amodio
Ok, let see. In several countries the use of the title engineer
applies to people that achieved a certain technical degree, I'm not
sure that applies uniformly but in Latin America using the engineer
title without having achieved that degree is illegal.

In other places such Italy it does not only require that you completed
the technical degree, you also must achieve certain level of
certifications.

Here in the US there are some particular type of engineers for which
the title is regulated, for example civil engineer.

The IEEE says:

The title, Engineer, and its derivatives should be reserved for those
individuals whose education and experience qualify them to practice in
a manner that protects public safety. Strict use of the title serves
the interest of both the IEEE-USA and the public by providing a
recognized designation by which those qualified to practice
engineering may be identified. The education and experience needed for
the title, Engineer, is evidenced by
- Graduation with an Engineering degree from an ABET/EAC accredited
program of engineering (or equivalent*), coupled with sufficient
experience in the field in which the term, Engineer, is used; and/or
- Licensure by any jurisdiction as a Professional Engineer.
- A degree from a foreign institution (or the total education when one
person holds a graduate degree in engineering but no accredited B.S.
in engineering) can be evaluated through a service offered by ABET.

Not sure if there similar regulations that apply in Canada.

My .02
Jorge

On Tue, Mar 30, 2010 at 10:26 PM, Steve Bertrand st...@ibctech.ca wrote:
 On 2010.03.30 23:20, Jorge Amodio wrote:
 I'd say that probably around here for those like me that have been in
 operations/engineering management positions we don't give a squat
 about what title your biz card says you have, your actions and
 performance speak by themselves.

 There are no kings around here so titles most of the time are worthless.

 By asking what title may impress others is sort of a -1 to start.

 It isn't about impression.

 I'd put 'janitor' on my business card for all I really care.

 I know what I love to do, and I know what I am great at. 10 years in the
 industry now. The only person who I try to impress is myself... by
 staying current on BCP and better ways to do things.

 My curiosity has the best of me, so I am looking for opinions. You have
 one ;)

 Those who know me know what I can do, and in reality, that is all I care
 about. I'm not out to impress anyone. I just want to be a good netizen
 like the rest.

 Impression isn't what I'm after. What I'm curious about is the potential
 over-use of the term 'engineer'.

 Cheers,

 Steve




Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-30 Thread Steve Bertrand
On 2010.03.30 23:34, Jorge Amodio wrote:
 Ok, let see. In several countries the use of the title engineer
 applies to people that achieved a certain technical degree, I'm not
 sure that applies uniformly but in Latin America using the engineer
 title without having achieved that degree is illegal.
 
 In other places such Italy it does not only require that you completed
 the technical degree, you also must achieve certain level of
 certifications.
 
 Here in the US there are some particular type of engineers for which
 the title is regulated, for example civil engineer.
 
 The IEEE says:
 
 The title, Engineer, and its derivatives should be reserved for those
 individuals whose education and experience qualify them to practice in
 a manner that protects public safety. Strict use of the title serves
 the interest of both the IEEE-USA and the public by providing a
 recognized designation by which those qualified to practice
 engineering may be identified. The education and experience needed for
 the title, Engineer, is evidenced by
 - Graduation with an Engineering degree from an ABET/EAC accredited
 program of engineering (or equivalent*), coupled with sufficient
 experience in the field in which the term, Engineer, is used; and/or
 - Licensure by any jurisdiction as a Professional Engineer.
 - A degree from a foreign institution (or the total education when one
 person holds a graduate degree in engineering but no accredited B.S.
 in engineering) can be evaluated through a service offered by ABET.
 
 Not sure if there similar regulations that apply in Canada.

Cheers Jorge,

This is pretty much what I was after. Thanks for digging it up for me.

Steve



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-30 Thread Anton Kapela

On Mar 30, 2010, at 11:33 PM, Steve Bertrand wrote:

 I did not mean to initiate a thread that turns into a joke. I'm quite
 serious. I guess I'm curious to get an understanding from others who
 work in a small environment that have no choice but to 'classify'
 themselves.

Unless we're talking about converting hydrocarbons to heat/energy or driving 
trains, the term Engineer is over-applied.

To borrow an old phrase, What's in a Title?

-Tk


Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-30 Thread Alastair Johnson

Steve Bertrand wrote:

I did not mean to initiate a thread that turns into a joke. I'm quite
serious. I guess I'm curious to get an understanding from others who
work in a small environment that have no choice but to 'classify'
themselves.


When I was in a similar role and situation to yourself my cards said 
network manager.


These days, working in an organisation big enough to restructure weekly, 
I removed the title from my business cards - now I have a blank space 
where I can write one in if I really *need* it.  But mostly I don't.


aj



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-30 Thread Jorge Amodio
that's right Steve, as I said before, what you do and how you do it,
and in particular what do you contribute to the networking community
will speak much better of yourself than any title you can imagine.

Do you think that folks like Tim Berners-Lee, Vint Cerf, Jon Postel,
etc, etc, need a title ?

Focus on the substance not on the appearance.

J

 The feedback that I've received off-list has led me to believe that I
 just need to scratch the title, and have my name and number.

 Who cares what I do. Those who want to call/email me will have a purpose
 for doing so anyway ;)

 Steve





Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-30 Thread Larry Sheldon
On 3/30/2010 22:35, Steve Bertrand wrote:

 The feedback that I've received off-list has led me to believe that I
 just need to scratch the title, and have my name and number.
 
 Who cares what I do. Those who want to call/email me will have a purpose
 for doing so anyway ;)

Post University I identify myself by name, three phone numbers and email
address.  Ifv I still carried a pager, its number might have been there,
although when I last carried a pager, the telephone system we had would
page me if somebody left a message.


-- 
Democracy: Three wolves and a sheep voting on the dinner menu.

Requiescas in pace o email
Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
Eppure si rinfresca

ICBM Targeting Information:  http://tinyurl.com/4sqczs
http://tinyurl.com/7tp8ml





Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-30 Thread Anton Kapela

On Mar 30, 2010, at 11:34 PM, Jorge Amodio wrote:

 The title, Engineer, and its derivatives should be reserved for those
 individuals whose education and experience qualify them to practice in
 a manner that protects public safety. Strict use of the title serves

...fortunately for us (and CCIE's around the globe) running the Internet 
doesn't involve much public trust. Does it?

In a few states in the US, working for the same engineering firm for some 
number of years (usually 6 or more) counts similarly as passing a 
state-administered professional engineering exam. It would be with some 
significant precedent, then, that a job or other professional experience does 
indeed equate to state-sponsored public trust.

So, back to Steve's first question:

 How does the ops community feel about using this designation? 


If you've been doing it for a while, and not been chased out, I would argue 
there is ample precedent to support don'ing the title. I guess the sticky-bits 
here include, potentially, a derth of colleges and graduate study calling 
itself network engineering.

Failing that, perhaps nanog-l could take a vote:

Does Steve deserve the title of Network Train Driver, list?

-Tk


Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-30 Thread Larry Sheldon
On 3/30/2010 22:44, Alastair Johnson wrote:
 Steve Bertrand wrote:
 I did not mean to initiate a thread that turns into a joke. I'm quite
 serious. I guess I'm curious to get an understanding from others who
 work in a small environment that have no choice but to 'classify'
 themselves.
 
 When I was in a similar role and situation to yourself my cards said 
 network manager.
 
 These days, working in an organisation big enough to restructure weekly, 
 I removed the title from my business cards - now I have a blank space 
 where I can write one in if I really *need* it.  But mostly I don't.

I've done that--the most useful information (IMHO) is connector (telno
or email) and reason why they want to contact me.
-- 
Democracy: Three wolves and a sheep voting on the dinner menu.

Requiescas in pace o email
Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
Eppure si rinfresca

ICBM Targeting Information:  http://tinyurl.com/4sqczs
http://tinyurl.com/7tp8ml





Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-30 Thread Steve Bertrand
On 2010.03.30 23:47, Jorge Amodio wrote:
 that's right Steve, as I said before, what you do and how you do it,
 and in particular what do you contribute to the networking community
 will speak much better of yourself than any title you can imagine.
 
 Do you think that folks like Tim Berners-Lee, Vint Cerf, Jon Postel,
 etc, etc, need a title ?
 
 Focus on the substance not on the appearance.

grazie, I capire.

My post was two fold... and I received a *lot* of off-list feedback that
I'll have to respond to tomorrow.

Generally, I know that a title isn't relevant, especially in the small
little area that I'm in. I was just very curious, as it came up in
discussion today.

I like to think that I do everything possible to do my part. To be
honest, I have as much or more interest in protecting other ASs than I
do our own clients (shhh ;)

Thanks very much Jorge. Although this was a fast-paced thread that was
very entertaining, you've enlightened me.

Cheers,

Steve

--
new sig
- stevieb
- senior master of disaster
- wrongly null-routing client bgp communities, and allowing x-vlan
sniffing since 1998



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-30 Thread Steve Bertrand
On 2010.03.30 23:50, Anton Kapela wrote:
 
 On Mar 30, 2010, at 11:34 PM, Jorge Amodio wrote:
 
 The title, Engineer, and its derivatives should be reserved for those
 individuals whose education and experience qualify them to practice in
 a manner that protects public safety. Strict use of the title serves
 
 ...fortunately for us (and CCIE's around the globe) running the Internet 
 doesn't involve much public trust. Does it?
 
 In a few states in the US, working for the same engineering firm for some 
 number of years (usually 6 or more) counts similarly as passing a 
 state-administered professional engineering exam. It would be with some 
 significant precedent, then, that a job or other professional experience does 
 indeed equate to state-sponsored public trust.
 
 So, back to Steve's first question:
 
 How does the ops community feel about using this designation? 
 
 
 If you've been doing it for a while, and not been chased out, I would argue 
 there is ample precedent to support don'ing the title. I guess the 
 sticky-bits here include, potentially, a derth of colleges and graduate study 
 calling itself network engineering.
 
 Failing that, perhaps nanog-l could take a vote:
 
 Does Steve deserve the title of Network Train Driver, list?

Not acceptable. I do not want this.

I read and review messages and documents from people who have *much*
more experience than I do every single day, and whom I respect to the
n'th degree.

This isn't a vote count. I am _not_ an engineer, and do not need or
desire the title.

Thanks anyway though ;)

Steve



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-30 Thread Ken Chase
On Tue, Mar 30, 2010 at 10:20:25PM -0500, Jorge Amodio said:
  I'd say that probably around here for those like me that have been in
  operations/engineering management positions we don't give a squat
  about what title your biz card says you have, your actions and
  performance speak by themselves.
  
  There are no kings around here so titles most of the time are worthless.
  
  By asking what title may impress others is sort of a -1 to start.

But you are wrong. Titles do speak and impress just not how you might expect.

Having a 'jokey' title signifies to other equally
free-to-operate-within-the-org people that you have the necessary freedom to
act outside the standard procedures when required. If you get away with chief
evangelist (as Mike Shaver had for a while at mozilla), not to mention his
other card which was international incident (possibly referring to a crypto
export situation?), you obviously have some independent (freedom from?)
authority and autonomy.

I managed to have Grizzled Internet Prospector on my card for a while at my
previous firm. It was as accurate as anything else I could put and indicated
to my peers that I was actually, well, an owner, eschewing a stuffy CEO or 
COO
title. (I had other sub companies with stuffy titles on them in case someone 
outside
the clued area needed to be placated.)

Another friend had minister of fear as his title at a network security firm.
At an exodus sponsored event which featured both Sun's XML accelerator
platform (?) and Bruce Schneier (the main attraction), he was originally
banned due to his joke title. The local industry slapped back through the
clued peoples' oldboys-n-girls network, and they backpedalled and he was
admitted at the last minute. It bit the exodus event organizer in the ass
hard, and had her eating crow for him in front of 30 of his peers at the event,
and handing over a free signed copy of Schneier's book. He really gained
notoriety and street cred from the situation, as silly as it was. Besting
the established order is worth something in most circles, still. (Google 
anyone?)

She obviously didnt understand the new business rules in effect: the jokey
title signified that titles didnt matter, reputation and ability did. Being
able to have a joke title indicates you dont need a real one. And so they're 
important
in a reverse-psychology kind of way :)

/kc (grizzled tube plumber)

  
  Cheers
  Jorge
  
  On Tue, Mar 30, 2010 at 10:14 PM, Steve Bertrand st...@ibctech.ca wrote:
   Hi all,
  
   This is perhaps a rather silly question, but one that I'd like to have
   answered.
  
   I'm young in the game, and over the years I've imagined numerous job
   titles that should go on my business card. They went from cool, to
   high-priority, to plain unimaginable.
  
   Now, after 10 years, I reflect back on what I've done, and what I do
   now. To me, if a business is loose-knit with no clear job descriptions
   or titles (ie. too small to have CXO etc), I feel that a business card
   should reflect what one feels is the primary job responsibility, or what
   they do the most (or love the most).
  
   For instance, I like to present myself as a 'network engineer'. I have
   never taken formal education, don't hold any certifications (well, since
   2001), and can't necessarily prove my worth.
  
   How does the ops community feel about using this designation? Is it
   intrusive or offensive to those who hold real engineering degrees? I'm
   content with 'network manager', given that I still do perform (in my
   sleep) numerous system tasks and have to sometimes deal with front-line
   helpdesk stuff.
  
   Instead of acting like I'm trying to sell myself out, I'll leave out
   what I actually do and ask those who sig themselves with 'network
   engineer' what they do day-to-day to acquire that title, and if they
   feel comfortable with having it.
  
   Steve

-- 
Ken Chase - k...@heavycomputing.ca - +1 416 897 6284 - Toronto CANADA
Heavy Computing - Clued bandwidth, colocation and managed linux VPS @151 Front 
St. W.



Re: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-30 Thread Michael Painter

Steve Bertrand wrote:


Not acceptable. I do not want this.

I read and review messages and documents from people who have *much*
more experience than I do every single day, and whom I respect to the
n'th degree.

This isn't a vote count. I am _not_ an engineer, and do not need or
desire the title.

Thanks anyway though ;)

Steve


Back at IBM ('64 to '71) we were officially called Customer Engineer.  When the 'System 360' was released, it was 
changed to Field Engineer.s


--Michael 





RE: Finding content in your job title

2010-03-30 Thread Joe

What I find most amusing in the field of networking is the terms and titles
various companies place upon them. Titles like Infrastructure specialist,
Network analyst, and Senior Specialist often have me giggling as to the
real meaning/position in a job posting. I think the funniest postings I see
are the ones where obviously someone in a HR role posts the position and
lumps together different aspects of the role trying to be filled, such as
Cisco MS Exchange expert or Firewall SQL Expert. Needless to say those
are not titles I would be boasting about or would care to advertise. In
short the last business card I handed out simply had the title MIS Dept. Its
hard enough to explain some of the aspects of network engineering to my wife
let alone a description of such on a business card. On one occasion my
mother in law asked if I could get a discount on large amounts of food, I
asked why she thought I could do such and her reply was well you work with
Sysco, a food services company. Needless to say it took a bit of time
to explain that sysco was not cisco.

Perhaps a brief description on the back of the card? Lol... 

Regards.
-Joe