CMD survives because it still works. PowerShell dominates because it can do everything CMD never imagined. The Command Line Never Died CMD is not dead. Microsoft did not bury it. It still waits patiently for someone to type ipconfig or dir like it is 2002. For its core tasks, CMD is simple and consistent. It remains the screwdriver every Windows
Tag: Azure
The Network That Never Sleeps Networks don’t take breaks. They hum through nights, holidays, and your supposed day off. Every ping, packet, and login request demands precision and continuity. For those of us in IT, it’s not glamour, it’s survival. That’s where automation steps in. Not to replace you, but to give you back the hours you’ve been surrendering to
The cloud isn’t magic—it’s someone else’s network, rented by the minute. Master it, or it will master you. The Illusion of the Cloud People love saying “it’s in the cloud”—as if that erases the need for cables, routers, and subnets. It doesn’t. Every byte of “cloud” data still travels through copper, fiber, and radio waves. The only difference is that
The cloud does not simplify IT. It just outsources your chaos and bills you monthly. The Great Cloud Pilgrimage They told everyone to move to the cloud. Like it was heaven. Like salvation came with a service-level agreement.They said it was modern, secure, efficient. They said it would set you free from cables, servers, and the smell of burning UPS
Every cloud evangelist has their talking points. Some worship AWS like it is the promised land. Others treat Azure as the inevitable choice of big business and government. But for those of us who have traced packets, rebuilt VLANs in the dark, and prayed through failed routes at 2 a.m., this debate is not about branding. It is about control,
There was a time when the hum of server fans defined an IT department. Today, the same architecture that powered those rooms now spans continents. The Windows stack didn’t die. It evolved. There is a quiet elegance in the Windows stack that many overlook. It does not try to impress with flash or hype. It simply works. Dependable, structured, and
Fall does not arrive with leaves. It arrives with latency, pop-up reminders, and professors who post the syllabus three days late and still expect you to be early. There is no chill in the air. Only dread. The kind that smells like old textbooks and tastes like stale coffee. I return to battle. Again. Another graduate program. This time in
Let’s get this out of the way: AWS is like that one overachieving kid in class who has 900 extracurriculars, speaks six languages, and somehow still gets perfect attendance. Impressive? Yes. Overkill for most of us? Absolutely. So when it came time for me, a solo IT administrator, to pick a cloud platform for our small but mighty public utility,
Hi, I’m the entire IT department. If something breaks, I fix it. If it’s slow, I get blamed. If a vendor calls, it’s me. If the server’s beeping at 2 a.m., that’s also me—staring at it in pajama pants while questioning my life choices. And in between all that, I’m somehow supposed to “modernize our infrastructure.” Look, I’m not against
So there I was — mid-study break, eyes glazed over from too much subnetting, trying to convince myself that PowerShell is fun — when out of nowhere…I started missing Quiapo. Yes, that Quiapo.The place where you can buy a rosary, a fake diploma, and lumpiang shanghai — all within 5 steps. Why do I miss it? Let me break it