Administrators have many responsibilities; user support is only one of them.

Although administrators need to address user problems, individual users can’t always be their highest priority. Administrators need to take care of systemwide issues before they can spend time on problems that only involve a single user. For example, if the system is nearly out of space or the network connection is down, an administrator shouldn’t stop working on that problem just to help a user print a memo.

Some office environments have a squad of administrators who are happy to help you with your every move. More commonly, however, offices have a handful (or fewer) of overworked administrators, whose responsibilities include:

  • Maintaining hardware, including computers, terminals, printers, modems, and sometimes even the phone system

  • Maintaining software, including the operating system, applications, servers, etc.

  • Maintaining the network, not only the physical network, but also the configuration of servers

  • Maintaining computer security

  • Ordering new hardware, software, etc. (which means spending a lot of time talking with salespeople)

  • Installing new hardware, software, etc.

  • Doing backups

  • Training users

  • Problem solving

When there are multiple administrators at a single site, the administrators are likely to break up these responsibilities among each other, each becoming a “specialist” in a certain area. Think of it like health care: like the human body, computer networks are complex, and a single practitioner can’t always fix a problem without consulting others with more expertise. At one site, you may have a Macintosh administrator, a PC administrator, a hardware expert, someone else who works primarily on network configurations, and someone who performs printer support. The nature of a problem may overlap several different fields — so if you have trouble printing from your PC, it may involve PC, printer, and network expertise.

There may also be an administrator dedicated to user support. If so, then you should probably look for the user support person before you consult anyone else, the same way you often have to see a primary care doctor before you make an appointment with a chiropractor.

Get WYNTK: UNIX System Admininistrator now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.