Mike Ault's thoughts on various topics, Oracle related and not. Note: I reserve the right to delete comments that are not contributing to the overall theme of the BLOG or are insulting or demeaning to anyone. The posts on this blog are provided “as is” with no warranties and confer no rights. The opinions expressed on this site are mine and mine alone, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.

Saturday, February 15, 2020

Sheepdogs, Wolves and Sheep


I read an interesting blog identifying three types of people, sheep, wolves and sheep dogs; with the sheep being the rank and file who basically keep their heads down and expect others to care for them, the wolves those that prey on the sheep and of course the sheepdogs being those who choose to defend the sheep.

Interesting as this analogy is I don’t believe it goes far enough. In the ranks of the sheep are actually wolves that act like sheep and in the wolves are many sheep. Unfortunately (or fortunately depending on circumstance) the true natures of these changelings often come to the surface in time of stress. What do I mean? Let me explain.

First let us take the case of the wolves who act like sheep. How many times have we heard “He/she was such a nice person, I can’t believe they did this!” these are examples of wolves who did their best to be sheep but one day it all came crashing down and they revert to wolf ways, eating their young and generally attacking anything within striking distance.

On the other side are the sheep who act like wolves, but usually only in a pack setting. Many gang and sect members fall into this category. As long as they are safely surrounded by the rest of their pack they act like wolves, isolate them and they quickly turn tail (metaphorically speaking) and bleat out the rest of the pack to save their own sheep hide. The real wolves get great pleasure and many laughs over leading sheep astray, of course they usually fall on these sheep and eat them (literally or figuratively) by getting them to do such things as the ultimate passive aggressive act such as wearing a vest packed with explosives and setting it off in a flock of sheep.

Of course we also have sheep with rabies and wolves with rabies that attack everyone around them whether they are sheep, wolves or some other unknown subspecies…

Of course we also have sheep who try to be sheepdogs and wolves who think they are sheepdogs. Generally the sheep who try to be sheepdogs are weeded out and placed in desk jobs, or the cemetery. The ones who get desk jobs take it out on the rest of the sheep for their own lack of sheepdogedness. The wolves who try to be sheepdogs usually do very well for a while, but eventually, unless they go out in a blaze of glory or reveal their wolfness in some manner, they end up preying on the sheep in a more virtual manner than the wolves who act like wolves, in the form of graft, corruption, police brutality and other behaviors unbecoming to sheepdogs.

Finally we have the stealth sheepdogs, they submerge into the flock and act sheeplike until they are needed, unfortunately unless they are prepared like the full sheepdogs, they usually get the sheep dip kicked out of them once they do act. However, many times they do actually help and prevent sheep from falling prey to the weaker wolves.

So where do you fall? Sheep, sheepdog or wolf? Or are you a pretender?

Catching up

I looked and realized I haven't blogged in too long a time. A lot has happened since my last post. I took classes in Z/VM (IBM), AI (MIT) and Blockchain (Blockgeeks, Oxford), then was laid off from IBM as they realigned the focus of storage (from senior level people to newbies that are cheaper.) So since Sept 4, 2020 I have been unemployed. After 250+ applications out and only a few interviews and no offers I am about to go semi-retired. I am upgrading my skill set by taking a Big Data Masters class from Intellipaat.

Since Intellipaat is in India and of course I am not, that means my classes run from 8:30 pm to 10:30 pm Monday-Thursday. Learning about Hadoop, Sqoop, Hbase, Flume, Pig, installing Hadoop clusters on AWS and all sorts of interesting topics. Soon I will be even more qualified to sit at home waiting for folks to respond to applications.

In my spare time I helped my daughter find and move into her new house, redo her bathroom, built shelves at my daughters and for my office, an end table, a breakfast tray, small step stool and some coasters. I also wrote a cookbook with over 85 recipes in it from my 46 years of cooking. (https://www.amazon.com/Recipes-Sunset-Cove-Michael-Ault-ebook/dp/B084T8XX1L/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=recipes+from+sunset+cove+kindle&qid=1581775548&sr=8-1)

So I am keeping busy.