Hokanu wrote:
Our people are pretty good but that fact that our entire department is 12 people is a bit mind boggling. Especially given our propensity to sell ourselves as a technologically forward thinking school district.
There are 3 technicians who do hands on repair. We support over 3500 workstations. Our district has about 17000 students.
1 helpdesk phone person, 1 db admin, 1 HW specialist (switches, wireless, printservers etc), 1 software person (maintains images and packages software for remote distribution), 2 trainers, 1 web master, 1 admin. We have one other person who was hurt on the job (she was a tech but had back surgery) and she is filling a role now keeping AD up to date.
As it is split, I have about 1300 machines, another tech has 1300 and the last one has about 900 (uneven due to size of schools).
Depends on the setup. Long long ago in a city far far away, when I did desktop support for a school, we did work in bulk. We'd mass copy harddrives, deploy 50 computers at a time to the labs/classrooms, and since students have a higher propensity to hose up a computers (no fear of getting fired), we would just format any machine with an issue. No worries about loss of personal files since nothing was stored on the hard drive. A lot less troubleshooting - if we couldn't fix it in a few minutes, just wipe it and reinstall DOS/Win 3.1. There were three of us who worked all six main campus buildings, and another guy who worked the satellite campuses. It's been a while, but I think we dealt with about 3000 PCs.
At my current employer, computer usage is more complex and diversified. The number of desktops is about the same, but there's no way our IT staff could get away with a minimal support crew in this environment.