Y’ALL…I am having one helluva run lately.
EXHIBIT A, from last month (and the only one I have pictorial evidence of):
Now, what I would love to be able to report is that, say, I came out from doing the grocery shopping and just found the side of my van smashed in like that.
Or that somebody rammed into us at a stop sign, because they were doing something really stupid like trying to text a selfie to themselves or some-such.
Or even that I just came out one morning and found that Homer had gotten into a dispute with another minivan over females (there is a rather sexy Corvette across the street that I suspect may be going into heat).
But this is not what happened.
What happened was…I hit a tree.
I
HIT
A
MOCHA-FUDGING
TREE.
…I just…can’t even…I have been driving for a bit over thirty years. I have by my rough estimation driven almost a million miles without a single “at-fault” accident to my record; six vehicles that were each over 200K miles before they went to the great Car Hereafter, adjusted down a bit in deference to the fact that most of them were also driven by the husband for at least some of those miles.
AND, I have been driving ‘extra long’ vehicles like full-sized or minivans for over twenty of those years. It’s not like I am not keenly aware of how much more vehicle there is after the driver’s seat has passed something. Or new to the peculiar geometry involved in piloting same, where the rear of your vehicle has a nasty habit of turning not exactly independently of the front end, but definitely on a different trajectory than you might expect.
But, I misjudged my clearance of that stupid tree. It’s planted right at the edge of a rather narrow driveway (like, “parking lot => sidewalk => let’s plant the tree HERE, literally IN the CURB!”), where you have to make a very sharp right turn to get onto the street. And I thought I was clear of it, but, well, I wasn’t.
For bonus points, at the time? I thought I’d bumped the tree. You know, lightly. I winced and thought, Ugh…more scratches…well, hopefully they’ll buff out, but, you know, eh, they’ll be in good company, poor old Homer has TONS of dings and scratches already…
Then I got home, walked around and looked at it, my chin hit the driveway and I may have uttered a few choice words that peeled the paint even more. And then I was all, “I can’t call the insurance company. I just can’t. There is no way I can say the words ‘I hit a tree’ and live…the embarrassment will kill me…”
But eventually I did and about a week later…
…it never even happened…
Right around the same time, work was a massive fireball of insanity. We had two releases back to back, we just started using this “automated” deploy tool that involves branching and merging and more merging and nobody really knows how to use the thing because training? naaaaaaaah, it’s INTUITIVE, and the Mandate™ is START USING THIS, IMMEDIATELY!, sooooooo, we did and inevitably, somebody really screwed it up.
…so then after that 2/26 release, the code in production was this weird meld of the 2/19 release and the 2/26 release and ?????????? release (October, I think) that had somehow gotten ported into the branch for 2/26…ugh, what a mess.
We’re still finding little…Easter eggs…all up and down the stack. Most of them minor irritations, but a few of them really, REALLY bad.
Like, deleted almost ALL of the profitability records, and mangled the ones it didn’t delete levels of bad.
{beats head on desk to ease pain}
Meanwhile in other news, our Sharepoint site – the entire site, calendars, wiki pages, documentation, ALL of it – vanished. Because another group decided to move it.
Well, parts of it.
Secretly, they were hoping nobody would notice and they would be able to allow everything they didn’t move to delete itself after seven days.
But old Killjoy over here noticed by 5:35 a.m. the very first day after they pulled this stunt, OH YES I DID.
And was on the horn screaming, “YOU WILL PUT IT BACK, ALL OF IT, RIGHT. NOW., DO YOU HEAR ME?!?!” by 5:38.
…geez, woman, people in China can hear you, calm down…
MEANWHILE, the Happy Hooligans were busy smashing the current branch of our handy-dandy, super-intuitive, this will make it so that NOTHING will EVER go wrong again during a deploy software.
Which then took about four days to untangle.
In the meantime, both my desktop and my laptop pitched massive hissy-fits and demanded maintenance. NOW.
{most of a precious weekend day spent running diagnostics / removing ancient software / reviewing the whackity-gazillion things that had inserted themselves into “on startup” loading} (on the plus side, both machines now boot in a fraction the time they used to take, and neither has given us a blue screen since)
Then we had an exhausting two-for-one event last weekend, with a BCP (<= “business continuity plan”, a.k.a., “let’s pretend that our production servers all simultaneously exploded and we had to switch over to the backup servers in the farm that is about 850 miles away from them!”) exercise and a huge patching event that rolled through darn near every server in Wholesale, and I was online an “extra” twenty hours between Friday night and Sunday afternoon.
Which was why my boss collared me Monday morning as I was pulling my favorite pot on my head so I could go joust some more windmills and said, “Hold it! You. Pick a day this week, and take most of it off.”
So after consulting the calendar, I picked today. I logged off by 9:30 in the morning, got my nails done and my bangs trimmed, and even got myself a treat at McDonalds on the way home.
It’s a beautiful, sunny day out here today, the birds are singing, the puddles from last week’s storms are all dried up, it’s not too hot and not too cold and I was thinking to myself, “Sweet! I still have, like, four hours before I have to pick up the Denizens! I can start working on the backyard, turn the water on and find all the busted manifolds, start rebuilding the beds we tore apart for the construction last year…it’ll be fantastic to get outside!”
…oh, but first, I’m going to clean this kitchen, ye gods, what a DISGUSTING mess..!
Scraped the first plate, flipped on the disposal, aaaaaaaaaaaand…[BLURRRRRRRRRGGGGGGLEEEEEEEEE!]
Water came welling up in the other sink. Nasty, blackened water with all manner of ick in it. Way more water than seemed even possible. Like, not just the water that I had put into the other sink, but like there was some kind of “let’s divert the creek water into that sink over there!” amounts of water.
I let out a screech that could be heard from space. Turned off the water and stood there watching in horrified fascination as the water continued to rise in the other sink. Breathed a sigh of relief as it started to ever so slowly stop rising and start draining again.
…and then I heard the unmistakable sound of a waterfall coming from under the sink. Threw it open and sure enough, the water wasn’t draining out the pipes, it was just happily creating a new lake for all its muck to splash around in under the sink.
You know those moments when you just kind of stand there for a second, mesmerized by something that is unfolding in front of you even as another part of your brain is screaming, “QUICK, YOU IDIOT! GET SOMETHING UNDER THAT! DON’T JUST STAND THERE WATCHING IT! MOVE-MOVE-MOVE!!”?
…but you can’t, all you can do is just stand there, like this?
Yeah.
Totally one of those moments.
About an hour later, there was a poor, underpaid-no-matter-how-much-he-makes guy currently rooting around under my nasty swamp-imbued kitchen sink forcing cables and jets of water and large machinery that goes “RRRRRUM-RUTTA-RUTTA-RUTTA-THUMP-THUMP!!” through the pipes that exit through the back of the sink.
Because hahahahaha, no, of course it wasn’t a “simple” case of the trap being full! Hahahahahahahahaha, no, it was some BIG, REALLY-SOLID clog somewhere MUCH further down the line!
{pours rum into soda, takes a very large sip}
Well, I was going to go work outside in the garden today…and I actually still could get an hour or two out there if I really wanted to…but frankly, I kind of don’t.
The deploy I’m not technically attending starts in an hour, the Denizens are popping in and out of my office like sideways jack-in-the-boxes, and I feel way more frazzled and on-edge than seems reasonable right this minute.
Like I expect to look over my shoulder and see an actual, living tiger staring at me meaningfully.
GAH!!!!!!!!
Oh.
Wait.
That’s just the cat.
Who is now meowing loudly because I glanced her direction, which hopefully means that I’m going to drop everything and feed her. Like, right-now.
Sigh.
My life, man. It’s just a never-ending cycle of thrilling adventure lately…
3 comments:
O laws I feel the Sharepoint pain. I still recall (and have not yet forgiven) the person who "reorganized" our Sharepoint of training materials. It had taken close to a year to get our field people to trust the evil computer site and to take copies of current training material, rather than use what they had been hiding in their laptops back pocket for eons. As I am told, stood up, loudly pronounced my opinion of situation in language those around didn't know I knew. Walked down 13 flights of stairs to our lobby, once around the building and then came back up in the elevator (knees don't do stairs in up mode). Coworkers had frozen in the cubes, hoping that they were not the cause of the wrath nor wanting to be the first landing spot for it.
We could also bond over disappearing J: drive folders that one by one left the screen as we watched. The companies entire training materials for safety and trades, the departments financials and scheduling plans, and other such necessities just "blip" and gone. Was like watching a sinking ship from shore. Thank gawd for backups and the fact it was at the start of the day so not much new work was lost.
Because computers.
What you need in your life is cloud computing - or something. OMG. That sounds like way.too.much.stuff. Way too much.
What was it with March?? I don't believe I've mentioned anywhere that we had an office fire, the second week of March, in a basement store room that someone thought would be perfect for the UBS hub (I think that's what it's called). Anyway, pretty much the entire office was out of action for over a week. I was lucky - I'm on a different office's email server and I'd recently taken a copy of my more-recent files on my laptop because I had a report to issue while on leave.
I knew our internal computing infrastructure was old, but this confirms that we have only just got past the worshiping cats level of IT. Like you, I've been involved in disaster recovery testing scenarios. And I can confidently say that the people in our IT department didn't have a clue. They still back up to tape. We're a multi-national company in the Fortune 500 and they don't have a cloud backup. If the CIO hadn't been asked to leave last November, they'd have been sacked over this. (Seriously, we've replaced the CFO, the CEO and the CIO in the last 18 months. Top of the CFO's "got to spend" list is several hundred million dollars on IT.)
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