Originally posted by Sysman
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Previously on "Gartner's #1 money saving tip: ditch your contractors"
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Apart from the trendy "it the fault of Microsoft", what was the actual problem at the LSE?
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What it means is that after the LSE's outage for a full day the other week:Originally posted by TheBigYinJames View PostAnd someone else beat me to it. Actually, strike that, I don''t know what it means, I'd hate to be the one imbuing the Gartner's article with any credibility.
Another design goal was extreme reliability. Microsoft claimed that the system had “100% reliability.” Dual processing sites were configured and the system could recover from any component failure within a second. It is reported that the LSE offers a five-9s SLA (Service Level Agreement). Unfortunately, this outage shoots the SLA for the next 84 years.
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If it helps, you're not. I doubt the analyst needs a PhD to state something quite so staggeringly obvious, "i.e. don't pay for something you don't need."Originally posted by TheBigYinJames View PostI'd hate to be the one imbuing the Gartner's article with any credibility.
The project I inherited had a bunch of management consultants hanging on doing, essentially, PM work. At £1300/day. I took great pleasure in telling them (politely) that their services were no longer required.
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And someone else beat me to it. Actually, strike that, I don''t know what it means, I'd hate to be the one imbuing the Gartner's article with any credibility.Originally posted by TheBigYinJames View Post99.999% (five nines) availability or 99.9% (three nines) availability, a lot easier to reach.
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99.999% (five nines) availability or 99.9% (three nines) availability, a lot easier to reach.Originally posted by HairyArsedBloke View PostWTF does that mean?
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WTF does that mean?11. If there are places where you don't need five nines of availability, settle for three nines.
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More American management bulltulip speak...Originally posted by swamp View PostContractor UK's 20 ways of cutting spelling and gramatical mistakes in Gartner's carppy article:
6.

Especially.
"strategize ways to save money with vendors"
I have an MBA but despise all the usual management speak. I doubt half the people working for Gartner have any industry knowledge at all...
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Contractor UK's 20 ways of cutting spelling and gramatical mistakes in Gartner's cr4ppy article:
6.Don't ignore "unmanaged" costs like printers or data center power. Specially DC Power.
Especially.
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WHS. And Gartmore too. Tosspots.Originally posted by Mich the Tester View Post.
Just heard the contractor budget is front & centre for the chop here.
But look at it the "weasle way":
1. Hire contractors - implement projects. Manager is a can-do guy.
2. Fire contractors - reduce budget expenditure. Manager is a cost-saving guy.
It's a win/win !
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True, but I only really understand it from a UK perspective.Originally posted by Mich the Tester View PostIt's not just Britain; it's infected the whole of Europe in the last 10 years as previously well run continental companies fell for the so-called 'Anglo-Saxon' economic model of quick profits in the short term, mega bonusses for management and hire-and-fire policies.
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I've been waiting for the chance to rant about those posters, but I think I'll just go for a cup of tea instead.Originally posted by VectraMan View PostTo Transformation.
I Transformation.
He Transformations.
She Transformations.
You Transformation.
They Transformation.
Sorry, doesn't make sense to me.
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It's not just Britain; it's infected the whole of Europe in the last 10 years as previously well run continental companies fell for the so-called 'Anglo-Saxon' economic model of quick profits in the short term, mega bonusses for management and hire-and-fire policies.Originally posted by TykeMerc View PostVain hope indeed.
Pointless middle and upper management will tend to survive in this country at the expense of people who can actually do real things, it's been that way for a very long time.
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