Websites like Mangolassi or Spiceworks
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ServerFault is one. We were just talking this morning about how it is not all that good. But it has its merits, for sure.
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There is Reddit, but it is awful.
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@scottalanmiller said in Websites like Mangolassi or Spiceworks:
There is Reddit, but it is awful.
oh man - don't temp that fate - I don't see how anyone finds anything of value over there.
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@scottalanmiller said in Websites like Mangolassi or Spiceworks:
There is Reddit, but it is awful.
Depends on what you're looking for.
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@dustinb3403 said in Websites like Mangolassi or Spiceworks:
@scottalanmiller said in Websites like Mangolassi or Spiceworks:
There is Reddit, but it is awful.
Depends on what you're looking for.
Information or useful discourse, lol.
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@scottalanmiller said in Websites like Mangolassi or Spiceworks:
@dustinb3403 said in Websites like Mangolassi or Spiceworks:
@scottalanmiller said in Websites like Mangolassi or Spiceworks:
There is Reddit, but it is awful.
Depends on what you're looking for.
Information or useful discourse, lol.
It's useful to know how awful some products are.
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@scottalanmiller said in Websites like Mangolassi or Spiceworks:
@dustinb3403 said in Websites like Mangolassi or Spiceworks:
@scottalanmiller said in Websites like Mangolassi or Spiceworks:
There is Reddit, but it is awful.
Depends on what you're looking for.
Information or useful discourse, lol.
Well sometimes you may get lucky and someone who is actually not ignorant of the subject of the question might find it and reply.
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Historically, ServerFault really pioneered the space for having an online IT site that had value (ExpertSexchange was older, but useless.) Before SF the world was basically email lists that got published, it was awful.
Spiceworks was the first real IT community where it was about discource, not Q&A. But they still didn't go all the way to discourse and kept Q&A as part of their function and were focused on their own product to some degree.
ML is, AFAIK, the first fully vendor neutral, discource focused IT peer community. When it was created, none other was known to exist.
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@scottalanmiller said in Websites like Mangolassi or Spiceworks:
None that are as good, that's for sure!
Yeah, I haven't found another site that's as useful as these two. For now, I'm gonna keep hanging around, learning from you guys.
Thanks. -
@alanrafael10 said in Websites like Mangolassi or Spiceworks:
@scottalanmiller said in Websites like Mangolassi or Spiceworks:
None that are as good, that's for sure!
Yeah, I haven't found another site that's as useful as these two. For now, I'm gonna keep hanging around, learning from you guys.
Thanks.Great to have you here!
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@scottalanmiller said in Websites like Mangolassi or Spiceworks:
Historically, ServerFault really pioneered the space for having an online IT site that had value (ExpertSexchange was older, but useless.) Before SF the world was basically email lists that got published, it was awful.
I hope all those procedures are done by experts....
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@rojoloco Freudian slip? Hahaha (jk)
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@nashbrydges just a great choice in capitalization.
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Worth a quick read:
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@scottalanmiller said in Websites like Mangolassi or Spiceworks:
There is Reddit, but it is awful.
Reddit depends HEAVILY on the subreddit. /r/sysadmin is a hit or miss (too many people from too many different size shops and experiance levels there). /r/storage has a few smart guys (NIMSO and what not) that I've had some good conversations with. /r/VMware outside of the VMware Community forums is a good place to get a question bounced off a few VCDX's.
TalesFromTechSupport is fairly hilarious somedays (again, hit or miss).
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I honestly spend more time on Slack these days than forums.
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@storageninja said in Websites like Mangolassi or Spiceworks:
I honestly spend more time on Slack these days than forums.
Any interesting Slack groups we should know about?
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@fateknollogee said in Websites like Mangolassi or Spiceworks:
@storageninja said in Websites like Mangolassi or Spiceworks:
I honestly spend more time on Slack these days than forums.
Any interesting Slack groups we should know about?
All mine are private
My company's internal slack is pretty interesting (20K employee's tons of whom are software engineers). It's how my remote team organizes things. The Veeam one is good (Vanguards and Veeam Certified people), the vExpert one is amazing (like 400 smart infrastructure people who between them know just about everything you would want to know about any topic). Part of what I like about Slack Teams and Subreddits is they have purposes and some degree of focus.
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https://www.technibble.com/forums/
It's more focussed towards IT business owners, (though most businesses there aren't running huge operations, a lot of one-man shows) and they'll boot anyone who isn't at least a tech. It's a pretty close knit community, with people often going the extra mile to help a fellow member out.
I'd say it's a very different community than Spiceworks. Expertise level is lower in some areas, but in other areas there some very different discussions going on. It can be a refreshing breaking from all the reoccurring posts about the same thing happening over and over that you see on Spiceworks. A decent amount of data recovery experts on there too that are always willing to give some good insight.
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@flaxking said in Websites like Mangolassi or Spiceworks:
It can be a refreshing breaking from all the reoccurring posts about the same thing happening over and over that you see on Spiceworks.
That's one of teh biggest pain points there. It's all just five questions rehashed every day. Posters acting like no one has talked about this before, and responders sick to death of people that have done zero research and never read anything.