RC45
Member
I agree 100%. I spent 28 years in the software and hardware industry, at the highest level of server consulting and support - and had a 100% success rate of production database, messaging and storage support history across multiple industries.I would advise not to do any software updates. In other words, if it's not broken, don't fix it. A software update could make a change to your vehicle that you don't like, and unlike shopping for a new pair of sneakers, there's NO way to go back. Once you do an update you are STUCK. When I do an update on my Mac or my iPhone, I can read detailed information on what that update is for and what it does. Not so with General Motors.
The difference between me and colleagues with career altering infrastructure failures?
Performing updates on a whim due to the vendor (whether MS, HP, Sun, Veritas, 3Par etc) simply releasing an update firmware/patch.
I was known to be ‘that guy’ that always wanted to know the reason for the update, the mitigation plan, the backup plan, the restore plan etc.
The day this push software nonsense started was the day I started laughing at and not with all the non-tech people gloating over their new cars.
There are going to be tens of millions of dollars worth of bricked hardware in everyone’s future - and they'll finally find out just how thankless our jobs in the server side IT industry were
I love it!!!!