March 17
Office 2007 Standard, 2008
By Eric Spiegel
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If you've ever watched the hit TV series 24 on Fox you may understand the direction Im going in with this article. If not, let me clue you in. The show follows the events of some dastardly terrorist attack and the intrepid federal agent Jack Bauers attempt to foil the bad guys. But these events always track within a 24 hour period and neatly wrap up in the final hour of that day.
IT professionals only wish they could nicely wrap up all their project work and the fires they must extinguish within a 24-hour period. As in 24
Office 2010 Code, technology can greatly enhance our ability to resolve difficult tasks quickly. However, technology can also wreak havoc because of security intrusions, viruses, poorly trained personnel and overworked, tired IT workers trying to accomplish too much in too little time.
Despite all this technology at your finger tips, do you ever feel like there are simply not enough hours in the day to get to even half of the tasks on your daily to-do list? Well
Microsoft Office 2010, join the club. Todays IT worker is truly stretched to squeeze every valuable minute out of every hour that races by each day. With short-handed technical staffs working in a global environment
Windows 7 X64, the stress levels of IT workers are being pushed to extremes.
I thought the best way to illustrate this was to walk through a typical day of an IT manager. This may or may not resonate with other IT professionals
Office 2007 Pro Plus Key, but hopefully it will illustrate how 24 hours can rocket past anyone working in IT.
05:30 Dragged to consciousness by alarm clock. Pulled out of wonderful dream where Vista desktop upgrade went without a hitch. Back to reality and off to the office.
06:00 Check the Blackberry while waiting for the traffic report to see if any system status alerts went out overnight and if the offshore development team in an opposite time zone has sent in their deliverables. Good news: no traffic issues. Bad news: a slew of system alerts and no deliverables in the inbox. Smart IT Columns Dealing with Idiot Vendors
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