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what's going on everyone today we are
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back and we are going to do another
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interview questions and answers video
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today we're going to cover a system
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engineer or a third level support
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engineer or wintel engineer whatever you
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would sort of call it wherever you're
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from i'm going to give you some
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questions that i have been asked when
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i've applied for system engineers and
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i'm also going to give you some
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questions that i usually ask system
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engineers in their interviews so i'm
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going to give you sort of a bit of a bit
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of a mix of both sides so the
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interviewer and the interviewee and i'll
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give you a bit of a breakdown of what we
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generally ask and what we ask for as
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usual i won't give you the answer
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exactly what i'll try and do is lead you
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to the answer or sort of tell you what
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the interviewer is looking for at that
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point but whatever it is i'm gonna try
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and give you a hand with your interview
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let me know how you go in the comment
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section below and if you do want to see
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some more videos that are similar in
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nature so i t things cloud related
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things smash the subscribe button and as
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usual smash the like button like you're
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gonna smash your interview so basically
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whether you've applied for a winter
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engineer role or a third level support
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engineer role or a system engineer role
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or something around server support
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linux support windows support something
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around that you're probably going to be
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asked some of these questions so some of
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these questions i have been asked in
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interviews and
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uh was maybe at the time a bit thrown by
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them and what i'm going to point out is
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that a lot of these questions are
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actually just looking for how you would
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answer them it's not necessarily looking
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for a right or wrong answer
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maybe just showing the interviewer how
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you get to a certain answer or how you
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go through the troubleshooting steps as
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a support engineer you're probably going
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to be doing a lot of bau actually that's
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all you're going to be doing by you so
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tickets that come up resolving issues in
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server environments or with user
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environments on on application servers
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etc so let's start so one of the most
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important things that you're going to be
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supporting is active directory so a very
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simple question is what is active
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directory so interview will ask you what
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is active directory and you will be
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asked to describe what it is so it's
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easy to say that it's a windows server
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service and it's something that you
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install on a windows server and talk
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about domain controllers and whatnot but
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really what they're looking for you to
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describe is what it actually is so it's
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a directory it's got users in it it's
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got groups in it it's got objects in it
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it's got policies in it so basically
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giving the interview a bit of
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understanding that you know what active
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directory is and its usefulness in the
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environment in the it environment that's
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what they're looking for giving them a
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very brief description so something like
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active directory is a user and object
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directory where we can sort of manage
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all of the objects and objects being
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users computers groups etc where we can
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manage all of those in
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one sort of area in one sort of in one
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service so active directory may give us
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the ability to do things like group
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policies or group users together in
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security groups or distribution lists
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etc that's the type of thing that
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they're looking for so maybe not such a
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textbook sort of answer not something
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that you would read straight out of the
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you know microsoft documentation what is
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active directory next question is what
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is dhcp so it's good if you can actually
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tell them what dhcp stands for i
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remember when i was going through my
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interviews i'd always try and remember
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i'd always try and remember what the
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acronyms mean and then i'd also try and
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remember an example of where i've used
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it or where i've had an issue with it or
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where i've had a ticket for it something
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along those lines so for example now if
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someone asks me what dhcp is i will tell
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them it's a dynamic host configuration
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protocol i think i got that right but
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more importantly what i do is i give
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them an example of what it is so i would
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tell them it serves out ip addresses it
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helps
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a device sort of apply the correct
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configuration to its network settings
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and basically that it sort of gives the
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devices on the network
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an address when they first come onto the
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network or an ip address and then maybe
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you can get into it a bit more and give
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a bit better example of how it's used
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and maybe i would also go and tell them
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what happens if the acp is not available
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so it's always a good idea to try and
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relate it back to
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what you have seen in the past so maybe
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like a scenario or a ticket that you've
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resolved or a ticket that you've had in
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your queue for some sort of
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issue with dhcp like a device not
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getting an ip address or a switch not
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having ip helper configured or something
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like that anything like that where you
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can sort of elaborate on that question
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is great they always
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even as an interview i will always
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really look upon that very well because
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it's speaking from experience it's very
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hard to speak off the top of your head
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if you don't have an example what is dns
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so that has come up in pretty much every
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interview i've had for a system engineer
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role actually what is dns so
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what is dns what does it stand for again
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domain name system that's right so what
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is dns and a system engineer or someone
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who's had some experience as a system
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engineer always know that it's always
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dns every problem is always dns the
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question will be around what is dns so
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what is it actually useful it's good to
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tell them the acronym again so don't
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name name system but what's more
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important is that you tell them what it
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does so basically it gives a friendly
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name to an ip address i mean that's
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that's one of the easiest ways that i
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can describe it to you
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rather than having to remember an ip
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address of a server we use a dns name
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rather than using an ip address
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for connecting an application to a
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database we'll use a dns name rather
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than an ip address so that we can then
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change it or
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be able to change the ip address behind
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that dns name or something along those
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lines so maybe give an example of that
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maybe even better give an example of
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when you've come across some sort of
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device that's using an ip address to
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connect to another device and then that
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ip address has changed and how that
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could have been resolved if you were
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actually using dns that would be a
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really good example and i would be very
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impressed if someone said that to me
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what is a ping and what protocol does it
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use so this is a bit of a tricky
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question
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so as you might know ping actually uses
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its own protocol icmp protocol so it's
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not here or there when it comes to tcp
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or udp but what what i'm trying to look
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for here is whether you've actually used
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a lot of ping to troubleshoot things and
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whether you understand that you know
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ping is a very
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useful tool in sort of finding out if a
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server or a device or something is
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online but there's also always caveats
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so it's good if you can describe those
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kvs as well so just because you can't
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ping something doesn't mean that it's
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down it could be that there's a firewall
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it could be that it's not responding to
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pings it could be that
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the service is down or the service is
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blocked on the actual device itself it
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could be many things but i'm just trying
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to get an understanding of do you know
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what ping is do you know what it's used
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for do you know what round trip time is
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you know how we calculate the latency
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those are the type of things that i'm
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trying to understand because it's as a
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engineer as a someone who's going to be
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a support engineer you're going to be
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doing a lot of pings and you're going to
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be doing a lot of troubleshooting so i
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want to understand i want to make sure
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that you i do understand that how do you
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check if a port is open there's plenty
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of ways you can check if a port is open
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i'll give you one tip if i'm
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interviewing for a windows engineer or a
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server engineer with windows background
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or if a senior engineer or something
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like that what i'm looking for
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is
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something a bit different to telnet so
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when i first came into iit all of the
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engineers around me were always using
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telnet to actually test if ports open
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which is great and it worked but we
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always would come across the issue where
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telnet wasn't installed on the windows
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server by default so that would have all
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the time we'd have an issue where we're
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doing some tests and then we find that
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telnet is not actually installed so i
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found that there was actually a tool in
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powershell commandlet in powershell that
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does the same thing test net connection
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so i always actually use this as a bit
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of a sneaky question to see if someone
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can give me a different answer to telnet
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doesn't have to be test net connection
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but it's nice to see if someone uses
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something a bit different something a
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bit easier like test mechanism because
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powershell's already installed and
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usually has the command available for
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you so i would love to see that i don't
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mind if we hear some linux answers
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i think it's
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ncat nc something like that it limits
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but whatever it is i'm just wanting to
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know if you know how to check if a port
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is open and i might also ask you why you
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would check if the port is open so i
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might say for example okay now that
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you've told me how to check if a port is
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open can you tell me why you would check
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if a portal is open can you give me an
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example where you've done that in the
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past and you can come back and tell me
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something like yeah we were setting up
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monitoring and wasn't working to a
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particular server so we wanted to know
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if the actual server could reach the
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monitoring probe or something like that
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so speaking of test net connection
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another question i would ask a windows
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engineer is what is powershell so
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i want all the engineers that come to
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wherever i'm working at the time i want
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them all to know what powershell is when
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i was sort of moving through the you
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know the roles that i've had and you can
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see that video in the card above when i
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was going through those sort of roles i
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found that a lot of the engineers who
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had been around the while had not been
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actually you know
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using powershell and they had not really
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bothered to learn powershell so i
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actually went and i thought that it was
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a great idea because you could do so
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much from powershell without actually
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having to click through all these bunch
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of different dialogues and management
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windows blah blah so i actually taught
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myself powershell with a book called
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powershell in 30 days of lunches or
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something like that anyway i'll find
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that post it in the section below and
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i'll also leave a card here somewhere
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so i want to know that the engineers can
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use powershell so if i ask you what is
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powershell that's a very basic question
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and i'll expect you to answer it very
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easily because you can tell me it's some
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sort of management or scripting tool
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that you can use in microsoft windows
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server or actually any microsoft windows
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device but more importantly i'll
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probably follow that up with a question
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like what have you used it for so give
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me an example where you've actually
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written a powershell script or you've
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fixed an issue using powershell or maybe
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you have just used powershell to
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diagnose an issue those are the type of
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questions that i'll be asking on the
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back of that question what is powershell
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so if you go and you study something you
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know like a document telling you what
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powershell does and what it's great for
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that's great but i'm also going to ask
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you a question about that as well and
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i'm going to make sure that you actually
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have real life experience using it and
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sometimes you'll be able to get away
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with you know just getting away with a
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very vague answer it really depends on
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the interviewer it depends if that
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interviewer is very strong with their
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powershelf skills or with their just in
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you know engineering skills in general
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or maybe if they're just a manager that
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has a bit of experience but can't really
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deep dive into it sometimes it's just a
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matter of luck with the interviewer what
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type of experience have you had in a
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certain software so
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as a windows engineer or as someone who
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has been in a system engineer role for a
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while or something like that it's very
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unlikely that all you're doing is
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supporting windows server unless you're
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in some massive environment where all
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you do is just do windows server type
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stuff you're probably doing something
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like
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citrix or microsoft azure or microsoft
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365 or
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supporting a vmware stack or supporting
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a hyper-v stack something along those
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lines so let's keep this a bit broad
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what i'll ask for is i'll ask for
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any other type of experience that you
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have so for example i might say to you
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what type of other experience do you
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have when it comes to server technology
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so some maybe something like vmware and
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you will say yeah i have a lot of vmware
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experience i've managed a 10 or 20 node
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cluster and we have been managing it in
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terms of patching in terms of
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troubleshooting in terms of maintenance
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so then i'll understand that you have a
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bit of vmware experience and i might
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come back with you with some sort of
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question about vmware so maybe i'll ask
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you how have you done patching in vmware
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or maybe i'll ask you how you actually
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apply host profiles in vmware or how you
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might add a new node to vmware or i
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might ask you the difference between
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thick and thin provisioning in vmware
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and ask you maybe a couple of scenarios
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that you might have troubleshooted in
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the past but that will be the general
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juice so i'll try and capture any other
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knowledge that you have so maybe you
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have some citrix knowledge ask you some
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questions about citrix what is a
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delivery controller licensing server
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something along those lines but if i ask
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and you return something that i have
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some knowledge in then i'll probably ask
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you another question based on that as
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well so moving slightly away from
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technical or still technical but not
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very focused on technical i might ask
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you some questions around ticketing or
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around some tickets that you've worked
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on so a really good example would be
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have you actually worked on any p1 or p2
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tickets in the past and if so can you
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describe them to me at this point i'm
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really looking for real life experience
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if you haven't worked on p1 or p2s in
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the past
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it's fine just say that but if you say
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you have then i expect you to be able to
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give me an example so i expect you to be
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able to go and tell me yes i have had
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many p1s and p2s one of them was about
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all printers being down on a windows
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file and print server and then i'll come
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back to you and say okay and how did you
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troubleshoot that issue
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and how did you resolve the issue and at
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that point i'm not really looking for a
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right or wrong answer what i'm trying to
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understand is how you troubleshoot and
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how you get to a certain point so how do
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you get to the point of going from a
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service that's completely down users
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calling you and saying that they can't
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print to a point where they're actually
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printing again i just sort of want to
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understand the methodology you do
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for your troubleshooting and how you get
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there and
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basically the knowledge that you will
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apply to get there as well when it comes
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to the p1 p2s i might ask you a couple
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of those so i might ask you one or two
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might ask you one about print might ask
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you one about a vmware environment being
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down or something like that depending on
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what you've told me in the previous
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questions i'll also ask you questions
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around slas so
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you know coming from an msp background
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and you'll probably be applying at msp
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as well coming from msp background i
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really need the engineers to understand
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what an sla is so i need you to
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understand that some customers have
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different slas to other customers and
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when we need to make sure we apply the
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right priority to those customers and to
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the right tickets and how to sort of
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differentiate between a p1 and a p2 and
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how you're going to sort of manage your
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time in the day so that the company as a
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whole meets all its slas just something
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a bit rough so that i understand that
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you know what a sla is and why it's
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important okay then i might actually
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move into
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some scenario type questions
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and we might leave these for like the
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senior type of engineers or the
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engineers where we're looking for a bit
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more experience but let's break them
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down anyway so one of the very common
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scenarios that will play out and i've
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been asked this in interviews and i've
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also asked this in interviews one of the
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most common scenarios that
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interview will ask you is they'll say
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this we have a customer who has a
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network so mpls or a when or something
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like that with 15 different branch sites
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and one head office every branch site
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has its own domain controller physical
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domain controller on site you come in on
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a monday morning and all of the users at
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branch a are saying that it's taking
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them over four minutes to log in so the
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window screen is sitting there and
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they're sort of loading but they're not
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able to do anything once they are logged
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in it's fine there's no sort of other
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issues and no one else is complaining
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about any slowness or anything like that
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but it's just a log in process we found
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that other branches so branch b branch c
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they're not actually having the same
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issue where would your troubleshooting
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start and what would you do to resolve
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the issue it might seem like the
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interviewer hasn't given you enough
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information at that point but that's
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exactly the idea what they're trying to
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look for what i would be trying to look
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for is your questions we're hoping that
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you will come back and ask a few
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questions like is there problems on this
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site is there problems on this site and
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is it just happening when they log on
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have you checked this have you checked
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that and we'll give you a feed you a bit
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of answers but not too much and then
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we'll just see where your mind goes
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again there's not really a right or
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wrong answer at this point i'm sort of
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just trying to understand how you are
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actually troubleshooting so the
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methodology you are applying i want to
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understand that you know you have the
00:16:29
analytical skills to get to the
00:16:30
resolution there is something very
00:16:32
obvious that we would love to hear and
00:16:34
that is that he sounds like the domain
00:16:36
controller on site is having some sort
00:16:38
of issue and it might be reaching out to
00:16:40
another domain controller whether you
00:16:41
actually get there or not is not that
00:16:43
important it's more important that i you
00:16:46
give me some questions back
00:16:48
and that i give you those answers and i
00:16:50
sort of see your brain ticking and i see
00:16:52
i understand how you sort of picture the
00:16:55
environment i'm hoping at that point
00:16:57
that you've drawn the environment in
00:16:58
your head and that you can sort of
00:17:00
understand
00:17:01
what's going on and you ask me the right
00:17:04
questions that will get you to the point
00:17:05
of saying oh it's the on-premises domain
00:17:08
controller so as usual i hope that was
00:17:09
helpful and i hope you smash your
00:17:11
interviews like you're going to smash
00:17:13
that like button and smash that
00:17:14
subscribe button i hope that you guys
00:17:16
land those roles that you've applied for
00:17:18
we'll see you next time