Labor Day is here. Or is it Labour Day? When I was a kid, I would often spell my words differently than standard American English. The teacher would often write some comment about British spelling or a stranger comment about archaic spelling. I always had an air of mystery about me. There would be the teachers whispering in the lunchroom about the enigmatic child, who couldn't spell. Is he an old soul reincarnate? Don't buy it? I don't either. I should have studied more. Again, today is Labor Day. It is a day to reflect on the sacrifices made by the average guy who goes to work every day. I have labored at many different types of work. I've washed pots and pans, I've cleaned toilets, scrubbed desks, and chalkboards. I sold Tandy Computers. I've taught junior-high, preschool, college and assisted post-doctoral students and university faculty with their research. I am proud to say that I labored as an academic librarian for most of my working life . No, I am not the person at the desk stamping your books. Nor am I the one shelving books and pushing the little cart around. There were times that I did those things. But, my work was largely behind the scenes. For most of my career, I was at a screen managing the library servers and online databases. Being the go-to guy when people needed to find Internet stuff, the expert of the online world. (HA!) For many years I was the sysadmin for a library's Sirsi Unicorn server. Sirsi was a company at the time based in Huntsville, Alabama. They made one of the first UNIX-based library management systems(LMS). Over the years, SIRSI bought out and merged with other LMS providers. They became the largest company in the field. I liked the SIRSI I first knew. They were a smaller organization. I got to know many of the people in Huntsville, including the CEO. I was fortunate to travel to Huntsville a few times to commune with them. One of the labors that I miss, strangely enough, is managing the LMS. It was a challenge. The SIRSI system had this Z39.50 server. (I won't go into details.) This server was used by many as an alternative means to search the library catalog. And it was the primary source of system headaches and bloodshot eyes. The Zserver created alot of processes that never died. So, my day's labor began at 5 AM from my home. There I would login to the LMS checking reports and seeing if the system was still up and running. Often, I would then turn from gentle, meek, and mild librarian into a process killer. I won't recount the bloody details. It might be too much for the faint-hearted. However, I enjoyed those morning exercises tracking the runaway processes. It was challenging, sitting there asking myself, "Why the hell isn't this working?" Over the years, we tried to work around the Zservers problems. We could never quite corrected its deficiencies. It was fun trying. Sadly, we shut down that UNIX-based LMS and switched to a Windows-based piece of %*^$*. I stepped aside from being the sysadmin and moved everything to the cloud for someone else to manage. It was a sad day when we shut our Unicorn down. So, on this Labor Day, I salute all you UNIX sysadmins. You who are out there keeping the Internet running, killing processes, fighting off hackers, and ever so reluctantly rebooting a server. No one knows what you do. There is an air of mystery about you. Enjoy it.