A smart company knows that a good lab notebook is an excellent tool in the hands of a smart sysadmin, but is
not a replacement. Such companies do well with their ISO-9002 certification, but still don't get anything done. But their failures are meticulously documented!
Smart sysadmins know that an excellent tool is a good lab notebook because then they don't
have to keep everything in their heads. They can spend their brains thinking about a better plot for the next Star Trek movie (I'll beg if I have to!).
A company that treats employees as if they're simply procedure-following monkeys deserves the churn, so try to not worry too hard about if-I-document-my-work-they'll-just-let-me-go. Document everything you can, write down your procedures and processes, and keep a good notebook. If they let you go, then they'll either see the light at the first crash and offer you work back, or learn their lesson even more brutally when they hire some dingbat who can only
follow procedures (oooh, a recent college graduate who will work for a third of the old IT guy -- what a bargain!), but not actually
think.
An employee that holds a company hostage with operating data isn't worth the time. No one in this tight of a working environment can afford to be a jerk and I don't have a lot of sympathy for hostage situations. Documentation is vital and willful withholding of operations data in the interests of "job security" is a sure path to that which is now euphemistically referred to as the "Employment Department". If one of my hires was a data hoarder, I'd seek the soonest method of extracting them and find someone to rebuild an open structure. I might keep
them on, especially if they were really helpful.
Keeping data and notes is vital, despite the occasional bad apple that uses it against you.
Cheers,
![[monkey] [monkey] [monkey]](/data/assets/smilies/monkey.gif)
Edward
Like Lovecraft? Know Photoshop? Got time for the Unspeakable?