/Certifications and Career General/

/Certifications and Career General/
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Currently streaming CCNP R&S videos

We have access to INE, CBTNuggets, Cisco Press and Udemy networking courses.

Anybody have MCSD:ALM? Interested in how difficult I can expect it to be.

CCNP Route - Passed
CCNP Switch - Failed
=(

Second attempt coming soon

...

>my board is for NEETS ONLY REEEEEEE

crisporino bumperino

anyone have a link for resume writing 101 for software devs or something similar?

it's hard to hype yourself when you hate yourself.

So what the fuck do you guys do exactly with those server things?

route

for what

wait how exactly does that rabbit page work
did you guys just see make a fool of myself or was that only on my end?

I'm about to start a trainee program/apprenticeship as sysadmin in a company which mainly uses Windows servers, but I wanted to specialise later in IT security, where knowledge in Linux is pretty much necessary.
What kind of certificate should I do or learn for?

Say youre a 24 yearold loser and want to become a productive member of society. Easiest way to become employable? Im bad at math but am willing to work at it. Have 8 months to learn all I can before Im kicked out. Programming networking anything I just need a better income than 3 shifts a week at a grocery store. Considering a degree in the uk if the next 8-12 months result in me not being a piece of shit so any advice on that would be good too.

Get your A+, N+ and work at a help desk.

Taking my N+ this week.

So working as engineer for an ecommerce startup can't be in the same league as working for a proper tech firm right?

Appreciate thr help. Looking into it now. Any tips on necesary math or learning programming or am I getting ahead of myself?

Live in the middle of nowhere in spain so hopefully wont have to travel to get the qualifications.

I run a small consulting firm in NYC (14 clients, two employees not including myself)

Any questions?

Decide on what you want to do

It's tougher to get progamming jobs without a degree and/or experience, so the path of least resistance would be to become a help desk monkey at first.

A+, N+, Sec+ are popular entry level certs at least in the U.S. They're easy to get.

Anyone?

I hate to be the postrrboy for uselessness herr but how does one generally decide? Seeing as I have no experience in any of this is there some sort of "crash course" of the different disciplines I could pursue so as to be better informed?

Helpdesk seems like a short term goal. Just dont want to findmyself regretting not going beyond that 5 years from now. I have an offer from my folkd to pay for the degree should I choose to pursue it so want to start getting informed and layout some sort of basic plan to know I just wont fuck it up.

Bidniz is bidniz, everything's adaptable.

Learn where you can, work when you can