universities in the 1980s: writing the majority of internet standard RFCs and their implementations
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@eloy
I'm under the impression that it was,easier back then because there was less stuff in that area that was already built and that people relied on.@wolf480pl absolutely, and protocol ossification is a thing
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universities in the 1980s: writing the majority of internet standard RFCs and their implementations
universities now: moving away from Microsoft cloud is really hard okay? 🥺
@eloy i get what you mean but the internet and the world in general had changed a lot since then
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@wolf480pl absolutely, and protocol ossification is a thing
@eloy
that being said, it'd still be nice if universities could pay their graduates to work on new protocols that might not have immediate use -
universities in the 1980s: writing the majority of internet standard RFCs and their implementations
universities now: moving away from Microsoft cloud is really hard okay? 🥺
@eloy
This makes me so sad... My uni has completely given up on IT development 
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universities in the 1980s: writing the majority of internet standard RFCs and their implementations
universities now: moving away from Microsoft cloud is really hard okay? 🥺
@eloy It was much easier to refine the technologies underpinning the Internet when the English department wasn’t using it to store all its ungraded essays.
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universities in the 1980s: writing the majority of internet standard RFCs and their implementations
universities now: moving away from Microsoft cloud is really hard okay? 🥺
@eloy Universities just also suffer from neoliberal brain rot. Neoliberal austerity is the cancer.
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@eloy Universities just also suffer from neoliberal brain rot. Neoliberal austerity is the cancer.
@taschenorakel @eloy
"Can I get some real-world experience doing a student job with the IT/Networking department?"
"We slashed their budget and fired most of them, but you might be able to get an unpaid internship with some SaaS company"
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@sidereal @eloy This is what happens when you let business factors drive your tech department. When I was in college, a bit more than 20 years ago, (a tiny rural community college) we had an a Computer Department with an IBM 1132 and a lab with a handful of DEC PDP 8s. I got a part time job assisting Sociology students with their statistical analysis. Great time, and the school consistently punched above its weight.
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@eloy @gnomon I'm low key terrified of what's going to happen to my university over the next 10-15 years as an entire generation of highly technical sysadmins from the 80s and early 90s ages out and retires, with not very many replacements in the pipeline. We have so many home-built, inexpensive, bespoke systems that keep things going, but they really need programmer or system programmer level people around.
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@wollman @eloy @gnomon The problem confronting the university is that it does not have 10x the money (and it can't get it). If you only have 1x the money and there are 10x the costs, you wind up with 1/10th of what you had and that will probably be disastrous. It will probably be especially disastrous if it comes with the related social attitudes towards service provision and network operation.
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@wollman @eloy @gnomon The problem confronting the university is that it does not have 10x the money (and it can't get it). If you only have 1x the money and there are 10x the costs, you wind up with 1/10th of what you had and that will probably be disastrous. It will probably be especially disastrous if it comes with the related social attitudes towards service provision and network operation.
@cks Different pots of money, often enough. I can't speak to Toronto but at MIT the overhead rate on staff is very high compared to the same services provided by an outside contractor. Not ten times as high but enough to be a pretty significant incentive to outsource. That's especially the case if some significant portion of the outsourcing bill can be capitalized (e.g., one-time development and conversion costs).
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universities in the 1980s: writing the majority of internet standard RFCs and their implementations
universities now: moving away from Microsoft cloud is really hard okay? 🥺
@eloy There used to be just a CS / Engineering department. There was no university IT. So it was far easier to make decisions.
Now there has to be a uni-wide IT team, with business goals, compliance, etc, often competing for resources with department specific IT groups. That's not necessarily a problem but makes it much harder to build and deploy new stuff if it always needs approval from higher up.
The worst though is when individual departments IT get folded into to main uni IT, then it's impossible to trial any innovations.
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universities in the 1980s: writing the majority of internet standard RFCs and their implementations
universities now: moving away from Microsoft cloud is really hard okay? 🥺
@eloy hey eloy, can i include a screenshot of your post in an article for a culture machine special issue on 'university as infrastructure'?
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R relay@relay.mycrowd.ca shared this topic