Hey Cy,
I noticed you and/or Danyale in-game the other day, cycling your characters. Looking forward to seeing a little more of you guys sometime soon!
Next month, my little girl turns THREE! I can't believe that much time has passed since I drove my wife to the hospital on that dark and chilly morning. I hope the remaining 14-15 years with her at home don't go as quickly but we'll just have to make the most of them, won't we?
I'm back in school, working on a Masters in Technology Systems (concentration on Information Security). I still work for Fuji and have no desire to leave; I'm simply taking advantage of their tuition reimbursement offer (finally) and making sure I'm better prepared if any market shudders affect the
medical IT world. I have a couple of ideas I'd like to explore a little more down the road but as of now they're just that, ideas. The entire degree is delivered via their Distance Learning program and all of my classes (two this semester) are and will be completed online. It's definitely a different experience but so far a good one.
As I said, I'm still with Fuji. Five years is my personal record for working with one company and I have no plans to make any changes in that area. I changed roles a couple years ago already, moving away from Project Management and into System Administration Training. I travel to customer sites (very occassionally) and to a small number of large cities to deliver education to groups of customers. The training I provide gets them up to speed in understanding the underlying technology of our system, how it works together, troubleshooting and day-to-day maintenance. I enjoy training a lot more than I even thought I would. It's very challenging; when teaching a group like this, I have to always be 'on' and ready for basically any question - at the end of an eight hour class, I'm exhausted. But to watch someone 'get it' all of a sudden is pretty cool.
Also, I manage the fleet of laptops we use in training. In our Regional classes each student has a laptop in front of them with VMware running a full and complete installation of our product, making our classes very hands-on. I make sure the VMware session is installed and running correctly and that the laptop is imaged appropriately. This part can get a little old after a while but it
is pretty cool to look across my office and see shelves filled with twenty-four IBM ThinkPad T41s networked and running making their switch go blinky-blinky-blinky.
Well, it looks like I got to rambling here but thanks for posting this Cy - it's always good to reconnect with folks here every once in a while.