This is the Message Centre for Icy North

Icy Naj 18 - Houston, We've Had an Incident

Post 1

Icy North

If you've worked in IT over the last decade or so, you may have become aware of a set of best practices known as the IT Infrastructure Library, or ITIL (you can pronounce it as either 'eye-till' or 'ittle' according to your taste - I prefer the former).

Essentially, it's a set of five large and exceedingly boring books, which recommend how you go about commissioning, designing, coding, testing and supporting IT systems. It doesn't tell you which tools or technologies you should use; it just gives you guidelines that you can follow to organise your IT department and outlines the processes that people need to follow to get everything done.

It was originally designed for use by the UK Civil Service, but it's now become a worldwide standard, used in commercial and public sector organisations alike.

People go on ITIL training courses to learn all about it. I've done them all over the years, and have a piece of paper which proclaims me to be an 'expert'. It's not unlike the diploma that the Wizard of Oz awarded to the Scarecrow. I also have a little diamond-shaped pin badge in a dull purple colour which I can, if I wish, wear on my business suit to tell people I know my ITIL. Amazingly, I've actually seen people who do this.

* * *

Often, the first thing that people learn about ITIL is the terminology. If nothing else, it's ensured that us IT crowd can communicate using the same language. There's a long glossary at the end of each of the books which defines all the terms and acronyms that they need to know.

Perhaps the first thing they will learn is the difference between an incident and a problem…

When your computer goes wrong and you ring the help desk, you might call it any of a number of things (most of which are unrepeatable). You might say you are having an issue, or an event, or a problem. ITIL tells you that these words are wrong. What you are actually reporting is an 'incident'. Indeed, in 1970, Apollo 13 pilot Jack Swigert should have contacted Mission Control by saying "Houston, we've had an incident". I guess we can forgive him his ITIL faux pas in the circumstances.

In fact, it doesn't matter whether the fault lies in your computer hardware, or in the software running on it, or in the network, even in the power supply. ITIL says that if you could do something before and you can't do it now, then that's an 'incident'. You may have noticed that we no longer have traffic accidents or house fires - the emergency services now call them all incidents.

The primary purpose of IT support is to get you working again as quickly as possible. The help desk may ask you to check your settings, or to reboot the system, or they may have to get engineers to fix something that's gone wrong somewhere down the line. They might also ask you work around the fault (maybe you could use a spreadsheet to do a job rather than the software app that's broken). The point is: when you can get working again, it's no longer an incident. They can close the ticket they opened for you.

So, we can't call a computer fault a 'problem' in that sense. But the term does exist. In a later journal I'll write a bit more about problems.


Icy Naj 18 - Houston, We've Had an Incident

Post 2

Galaxy Babe - eclectic editor

I had been wondering about the difference between problems, issues and incidents. Thanks for explainingsmiley - oksmiley - cdouble

GB
smiley - galaxysmiley - diva


Icy Naj 18 - Houston, We've Had an Incident

Post 3

Superfrenchie

smiley - headhurts I had an incident at work last night. smiley - sadface


Icy Naj 18 - Houston, We've Had an Incident

Post 4

Gnomon - time to move on

We use the same terminology in work - things are divided into incidents, problems, tasks and changes. I've heard people mentioning ITIL but I've never been trained in it.


Icy Naj 18 - Houston, We've Had an Incident

Post 5

paulh, vaccinated against the Omigod Variant

Let me get this straight. It's an incident until it gets resolved, after which it's an outcident? smiley - huh


Icy Naj 18 - Houston, We've Had an Incident

Post 6

You can call me TC

And two happening at once is a co-incidence.


Icy Naj 18 - Houston, We've Had an Incident

Post 7

Recumbentman

How do you rate the image of IT specialists in 'The IT Crowd'? (And Gnomon too, you're in that line of work)


Icy Naj 18 - Houston, We've Had an Incident

Post 8

Amy Pawloski, aka 'paper lady'--'Mufflewhump'?!? click here to find out... (ACE)

[Amy P]


Icy Naj 18 - Houston, We've Had an Incident

Post 9

Icy North

From the little I've seen of the IT Crowd, it's pretty accurate. But they're great comedians, Richard Ayoade particularly.

I've worked with IT people from quite diverse backgrounds over the years. One programmer used to bone pig heads for the Shippams paste factory. One of the best database guys I worked with was a historian of Ancient Rome.


Icy Naj 18 - Houston, We've Had an Incident

Post 10

Beatrice

Is the ITIL responsible for the "Have you tried switching it off and on again" response?


Icy Naj 18 - Houston, We've Had an Incident

Post 11

Icy North

No, that was Bill Gates, or maybe the inventor of the IBM PC.

I remember once following this advice to the letter, not realising the server was also being used to host the Local Area Network. I learned that some people have no sense of humour whatsoever.


Icy Naj 18 - Houston, We've Had an Incident

Post 12

Recumbentman

Oh-ho-ho!


Icy Naj 18 - Houston, We've Had an Incident

Post 13

SashaQ - happysad

I like the IT Crowd too smiley - ok

My stock phrases are "have you tried clearing the cache?" and also "have you tried logging out and then logging back in again?" smiley - online2long


Icy Naj 18 - Houston, We've Had an Incident

Post 14

Icy North

I once got Quote of the Day for my advice on clearing the cache: http://h2g2.com/forums/A388325/conversation/view/F47996/T8300259#P110722214


Icy Naj 18 - Houston, We've Had an Incident

Post 15

SashaQ - happysad

smiley - oksmiley - laugh


Icy Naj 18 - Houston, We've Had an Incident

Post 16

TRiG (Ireland) A dog, so bade in office

I've actually not come across ITIL, but then, I'm not in IT Support. I just build this software, I don't use it,!

TRiG.smiley - winkeye


Icy Naj 18 - Houston, We've Had an Incident

Post 17

paulh, vaccinated against the Omigod Variant

" I learned that some people have no sense of humour whatsoever." [Icy North]

smiley - biggrin

Let me guess: they also tend to rise to high positions in the power structure? smiley - bigeyes


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