[I hope this belongs here - if not, lmk and I'll delete the post. I've been mainly lurking here so far]
In a month I'll be in charge of "IT-stuff" in a small office. People are generally happy if there is internet and VoIP is working. I'd like to take the opportunity to learn what I can, while I have the chance. And maybe/hopefully contribute to make it a bit better. For now I want to look into how I should configure wifi and access for office/guests (and devices that are used obv.) Thing is, I don't know where to start and what I actually can do. Do I just google "how to configure wifi in the office?" and go from there? (I'm a bit hesitant to do that since I'll not be able to tell if what I find is good) Is there any good reference material you would suggest? Any suggestions are appreciated.
I studied business informatics (but it's been a while) so I'm not completely clueless (but still clueless hehe).
Big focus on the model system if possible. My partner still reminds me about the time I said a minor update in my stack* would take "a few minutes" ๐
I work with customers a lot, and it's always impressive when I say "Yeah, just do these two things and it'll fix your issue" and then it does. What they don't see is the hours and hours I spent breaking shit, resetting the test environment, and breaking it again.
It's like the apocryphal tale of the engineer who charged for knowing where to tap the hammer.
Thanks for the suggestions! When you say model, do you mean the OSI model or just an actual network where I can tinker? Lettuce eat lettuce was kind enough to make a list of the basics - I'll use that as a guideline. Others have provided material as well; it seems I do not need to worry about filling time :)
Yep, an actual model of your network that you can tinker with