-------------------------------------------------------------- 25-10-2024 -------------------------------------------------------------- It's a bit odd, I'm so excitable when it comes to computer networking and everything related to bits and bobs, but these days I've been finding it more and more difficult to stay excited about everything. At work, I'm constantly surrounded by people who are used to doing IT with the approach of "if it doesn't work, send in a ticket with the manufacturer, then lay back and relax", rather than the "if you haven't meticulously researched every aspect of what could possibly be going wrong yet, you're not yet in the phase where you can justify asking for help from anyone" that I learned in university and that made me the "engineer" (didn't finish uni, don't have the official title) I am today. I don't mean to brag here, but I really hate the industry of "easy IT". I've had multiple solutions for problems get rejected since they'd involve "black screen white letters" and basically just me and one colleague are comfortable using terminals while the rest are restricted to colorful web interfaces, making any solution that requires editing config files directly a bus factor of only 2 people in the company, and hiring more people who know what they're doing is far too expensive. Hell, even paying me what I'm worth is too much for them. I should probably be working somewhere else, it's not like linux proficiency isn't sought after in today's job market, but what I really want to address is bigger than that. It's that something that's so big and full of opportunities as IT and everything that constitutes what it is today is being dumbed down over the generations of increasing importance of IT-ifying everything in our lives, such that there's this massive industry now of "smart" technology that's supposed to make things easier for people but only serves to abstractify that which shouldn't be abstracted. If you're not willing to learn HTML, you shouldn't have a website. If you're not willing to learn networking, you shouldn't be in cybersecurity. If you're not curious about IT and what makes it magical, you shouldn't be here. Am I being an elitist gatekeeper? Yes. But so are you, since I'm not planning on publishing this on anything but my phlog so any disagreement is a pot calling the kettle black.