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ehnde wrote: » My first job out of college was as a NOC tech. This is how my day generally went... There were large flat screen monitors on spanning all of the walls in a room with 3 rows of about 10 computers all facing one direction. The wall we faced had SNMP monitoring software and we saw every alert. Many of the alerts we would let scroll across the screen as insignificant. The ones that we addressed would be something like this: - alerts would come in, and we would sort the ones that mattered into tickets and assigned them to ourselves - switch port flapping for a business customer (they had something like a Cisco 3750 on prem that was ours and we did a handoff to them) - 500 cable modems in an area have gone offline, find out why and address it as needed...frequently it meant dispatching a cable tech to the area, but we managed the CMTSs that the cable modems ran off of - OSPF or RIPv2 route changes. What happened? Did a port go bad? Did we lose a circuit somewhere? - It's game day. Check the channel that the game is on and ensure it is playing properly. - Nothing else going on? I'm sure you have some to do. This stuff is not hard, is it? Keep in mind this is the type of stuff you do as a newbie and are just grateful to have your foot in the door If you are lucky, you would be on 3rd shift when the actual maintenance occurs. This is when you get to configure routers, switches, and other industry specific equipment such as DSLAMs, CMTSs, etc (don't worry, they will train you). Other than having the foundational knowledge required to do this work, the biggest thing they will be observing is your psychology...that is two questions really: Can this guy handle serious pressure? Will he get along with his peers? Those questions are just about as important as if you have the knowledge to do the job. But hey...maybe you won't work in a NOC! Maybe you'll work for a MSP or as a consultant...who knows what's out there?
Jackace wrote: » Just wondering the size of the network you manage? How many nodes? How spread out are remote locations?
Jackace wrote: » That is a huge network for 1 person to manage. You have to be putting in a ton of hours. I hope you are getting paid well. The experience you are getting though is top notch. About the only thing I didn't see in there was Voip experience.
Jackace wrote: » That is a huge network for 1 person to manage.
Trifidw wrote: » What happens when you are on AL too?
staticz wrote: » This. I dont know how you survive it. I have 8 sites with about 2,000 users and a 1 hour semi-maintenance window per month (we get two full outages for 1 hour per year) and I go nuts. Then again it looks like you have more experience than I do! What is the ballpark pay range for your gig if you don't mind me asking?
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