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AreWeDrunkYet posted:You'll probably want to spell it right on your resume though. Touché.
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# ? Mar 14, 2013 03:05 |
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# ? May 16, 2024 18:47 |
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Nebulis01 posted:I have the MCITP:EA and automagically obtained the MCSA2008 cert which i then upgraded to MCSA2012 and am sitting for the final test 70-414 for MCSE2012 on Friday. Alright cool, I guess they're just poo poo at updating their site or something.
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# ? Mar 14, 2013 03:08 |
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SaltLick posted:That is pretty much the purpose of those certs. Anything that says 2 years of experience of help desk is bullshit. Get A+ and apply. Hell you could probably put in your résumé "persuing A+ certification" and get hired. Here's the typical job posting in my area: https://jobs-intellidyne.icims.com/jobs/1870/job?mode=job&iis=Indeed&iisn=Indeed.com quote:Qualifications Should I be saying "screw it" and send my resume to such jobs anyway? forever gold fucked around with this message at 05:41 on Mar 14, 2013 |
# ? Mar 14, 2013 05:19 |
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Yes, apply for any jobs because they may need someone really badly and find that you're a good fit and like you and you sure can't find this out by not applying.
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# ? Mar 14, 2013 05:37 |
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forever gold posted:
Yes. Don't screen yourself out of jobs like that, let the hiring manager do that. You never know, they may decide you're a good fit and then voila, new job.
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# ? Mar 14, 2013 12:04 |
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Well after 12 long years in IT, I'm actually going to get some certs this year! The boss has put "get certified" as one of my goals this year, and he's put me up for some targets: Linux+ MCSE: Communication Certified Sonicwall Security Admin (CSSA) Any hints or tips for these baddies? I've got Linux+ in the bag (5+ years RedHat/Debian experience). I'm wondering a little about the CSSA and a LOT about the MCSE.
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# ? Mar 15, 2013 02:28 |
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Passed Sec+ with 869 out of 900. Unfortunately it's $284 now.
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# ? Mar 15, 2013 19:37 |
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Lord Dudeguy posted:Well after 12 long years in IT, I'm actually going to get some certs this year! I got my Websense Gateway 101 Cert, painfully easy but quite fun! You can remote into pre-setup labs for studying. If its anything like a Firewall Cert...
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# ? Mar 15, 2013 19:52 |
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penga86 posted:Good luck. I'm sitting the 640 tomorrow Well i failed with a 570 score. I feel like a moron. Guess I'll brush up on certificates because I got killed on those questions.
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# ? Mar 15, 2013 20:55 |
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penga86 posted:Well i failed with a 570 score. I feel like a moron. Guess I'll brush up on certificates because I got killed on those questions. Suck Don't take it too bad atleast you know where your weakness is and can brush up. I can tell you that certificates and ADRMS were a huge portion of 70-414. I managed to just pass it (790/1000) today.
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# ? Mar 16, 2013 01:42 |
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exethan posted:Passed Sec+ with 869 out of 900. Unfortunately it's $284 now. Holy crap when did this happen. Would it be worthwhile to just save an extra $200 and get CEH instead of S+?
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# ? Mar 16, 2013 13:20 |
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Are there any student discounts for the Microsoft exams anymore? My bookmarks are no longer working, and through Dreamspark they are not showing up anywhere. How about any student discounts for CompTIA certs?
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# ? Mar 16, 2013 21:20 |
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Science posted:Holy crap when did this happen. Would it be worthwhile to just save an extra $200 and get CEH instead of S+? A lot of IT related Department of Defense / military / military contractor jobs require Sec+ or equivalent cert now so they're gouging away.
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# ? Mar 16, 2013 21:26 |
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foundtomorrow posted:Are there any student discounts for the Microsoft exams anymore? My bookmarks are no longer working, and through Dreamspark they are not showing up anywhere. If you do them through prometric, you can choose Microsoft student exams to schedule. They are 83 dollars.
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# ? Mar 16, 2013 22:01 |
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I have a question concerning the A+. I'm looking to getting both of my A+/N+ in the next few weeks to help me get into an entry level IT job and to pad up my resume. Is there any difference in taking either the 220-701/220-702 series or the 220-801/220-802 to certify for the A+? The wordage on the CompTia website leads me to believe that taking either series of exams results in the same certification, but I'd like to clear it by the thread first before I sign up.
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# ? Mar 18, 2013 05:24 |
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Senor Science posted:I have a question concerning the A+. I'm looking to getting both of my A+/N+ in the next few weeks to help me get into an entry level IT job and to pad up my resume. The test version doesn't matter, but the newer version has a revised syllabus and a few simulations.
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# ? Mar 18, 2013 06:37 |
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I'm looking to get A+ certified in about a month and I was wondering if the CompTIA/Sybex books would be beneficial, or if it'd be a waste of money when there seems to be so much free info available online. The practice exam portion of the link on the OP thread is currently down, does anyone have any links to other practice exams? As far as studying, is my best approach to be finding a practice exam and studying the subject matter for questions I'm not sure about? The CompTIA book is 1000+ pages and judging from everything I've read, reading the entire manual for this exam is probably going overboard.
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# ? Mar 18, 2013 21:22 |
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Man I really hope I pass the 70-640 when I take it again. I had to reschedule my retake exam twice due to work scheduling ($35 each time to reschedule). Add in the cost of having to take it twice, this is starting to get mighty expensive due to me being unable to pass on my first go around.
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# ? Mar 18, 2013 21:50 |
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forever gold posted:The test version doesn't matter, but the newer version has a revised syllabus and a few simulations. I took the newer tests this January and the cert they gave me was A+ ce which expires eventually, I'm not sure which you get if you pass the older versions. If you don't remember old hardware (ISA/PCI etc) you'd probably be better off taking the new stuff.
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# ? Mar 18, 2013 22:21 |
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lazypeterson posted:I'm looking to get A+ certified in about a month and I was wondering if the CompTIA/Sybex books would be beneficial, or if it'd be a waste of money when there seems to be so much free info available online. The practice exam portion of the link on the OP thread is currently down, does anyone have any links to other practice exams? Depends on your familiarity with the material. I didn't know much about computers and I found reading one of those thick books (the Sybex one) to be illuminating. I hear the Michael Myers book is less dry though. That said, I bet you can absorb the material just through the web and the Professor Messer videos. Prof Messer even has a great deal of practice questions on his website compiled over the last few years that are quite similar to the ones on the test.
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# ? Mar 19, 2013 00:39 |
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forever gold posted:Depends on your familiarity with the material. I didn't know much about computers and I found reading one of those thick books (the Sybex one) to be illuminating. I hear the Michael Myers book is less dry though. That said, I bet you can absorb the material just through the web and the Professor Messer videos. Prof Messer even has a great deal of practice questions on his website compiled over the last few years that are quite similar to the ones on the test. I did next to no preparing for it after just kind of generally looking over the subjects, the one thing I wasn't expecting is some of the questions were not at all related to technical things but rather chain of custody for evidence or chain of command stuff for people problems, although the correct answer basically screams PICK ME if you take the time to read it slowly.
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# ? Mar 19, 2013 00:46 |
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forever gold posted:The test version doesn't matter, but the newer version has a revised syllabus and a few simulations. Thank you for the clarification. If anyone is studying for the A+, I found this set of flashcards to be very helpful in memorizing port numbers and the like.
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# ? Mar 19, 2013 03:24 |
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I finally passed the 70-640 after months of stalling and telling everyone I was taking it "soon". Those certificate questions are absolutely killer, and I felt like they comprised way more than 20% of the exam(or maybe they just stuck out for me more than others). This is a huge weight off my shoulders as I can now relax for spring and get my A+ and N+ out of the way before moving on to 70-642. That's 1 certification down out of 5. A+ N+ 70-642 Windows 7 penga86 posted:Man I really hope I pass the 70-640 when I take it again. I had to reschedule my retake exam twice due to work scheduling ($35 each time to reschedule). Add in the cost of having to take it twice, this is starting to get mighty expensive due to me being unable to pass on my first go around. Hey man, you'll get it next time. That's crazy they charge you money to reschedule a exam though. For about 2 weeks, I ended up doing nothing but reading technet articles and doing heavy lab work with CS, and even with all of that, it was the lowest part of my test.
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# ? Mar 20, 2013 13:46 |
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Well this new job has a pretty nice perk. They want me to get (min 1 cert/year), but preferably 3 or 4. I'm going to be working on various teams for the first 6 months so I can get an understanding of how each "team" works and the responsibility of the department/team. After which it is straight to VMware/storage/network. The good part is they pay for the cert and give you a nice bonus if you hit the goal of 3 certs a year. They pay for the books and training The certs I am thinking about doing are; VCAP-DCA, AutoDeploy and image building tripped me up I really should have just moved on and probably would have passed fine(taking it after a week in vegas probably wasn't the smartest thing in retrospect), got a 287... However my exam is on the 5th so I will probably get this prior to my hire date. VCAP-DCA View, as I will be working quite a bit I am told with this product. As well as the Windows 411 exam. I would really, really, like to go for the DCD at VMworld, when I spoke to 1010101 about it, it seems like a fun exam. However I feel I should branch out a bit more into something else. So, I am looking into CCNA-Datacenter, or RHCSA. I like the objectives of the CCNA-Datacenter and think I could learn some best practice networking skills, however the RHCSA, while they don't have many unix customers in need of support they are growing, I feel it would be more fun and teach me a lot more. Suggestions?
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# ? Mar 20, 2013 15:37 |
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Corvettefisher posted:[...]After which it is straight to VMware/storage/network.[..] As a networker, I would say: go for that CCNA-DC. The workings of the network (storage or data) is integral to the working of your virtual environment. It will help you diagnose problems faster and help you speak the lingo with your networking team. Since you seem to be compiling a list, how about some storage certs?
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# ? Mar 20, 2013 16:00 |
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Jelmylicious posted:As a networker, I would say: go for that CCNA-DC. The workings of the network (storage or data) is integral to the working of your virtual environment. It will help you diagnose problems faster and help you speak the lingo with your networking team. Already have the EMCISA, but the place I am going isn't an EMC reseller. Nettapp ain't going to happen in my area, I do hear they work a lot with 3Par. I know a good amount of networking already, my current job is a huge Cisco Partner. I think I need to look up what sets the DC different from the CCNA. Oh wait I never re-certified for the new EMC E10-001 ISM v2 Exam, I should probably just knock that out. Dilbert As FUCK fucked around with this message at 16:15 on Mar 20, 2013 |
# ? Mar 20, 2013 16:06 |
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CCNA datacenter focuses on Nexus, UCS and to a lesser degree (probably none) ACE. You probably won't have to learn frame relay and I'm guessing it won't go too deep into routing protocols. If the exams are anything like the ones for the CCNP datacenter then it'll probably be pretty easy to get it.
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# ? Mar 21, 2013 05:05 |
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What do you study for EMCISA? I don't even see books specifically geared for it, is it just the Information Storage and Management book? I guess I expected there to be more, that seemed pretty high level, I dunno.
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# ? Mar 21, 2013 05:58 |
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ToG posted:So there's a new harder CCNA coming this june apparently. I was just digging for a trustworthy source because our lab assistant was dubious when I mentioned the upcoming change, but I basically I found nothing but a chain of hearsay that ends at "imakenews.com". Not that there couldn't be a leak or something, but an element of doubt has definitely crept into my mind here as far as that specific timetable.
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# ? Mar 21, 2013 06:03 |
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penga86 posted:Well i failed with a 570 score. I feel like a moron. Guess I'll brush up on certificates because I got killed on those questions. I know that feel. Failed on those concepts as well. To be fair out of all the non-core-active directory features that are in that test certificates are a legit core function, ADRMS is bullshit filler and Federated services in the middle. Get in those VMs and run the examples.
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# ? Mar 21, 2013 06:05 |
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MC Fruit Stripe posted:What do you study for EMCISA? I don't even see books specifically geared for it, is it just the Information Storage and Management book? I guess I expected there to be more, that seemed pretty high level, I dunno. You study for how various SAN stuff works, it is actually pretty cool stuff if you want detailed insight on how things work. http://www.amazon.com/Information-Storage-Management-Virtualized-Environments/dp/1118094832/ Covers how FC vs. IP base traffic work, how raid levels affect reads and writes, data replication and protection, how data is moved accessed, etc etc.
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# ? Mar 21, 2013 14:37 |
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So, I'm signed up for RH255 Red Hat System Administration III with RHCSA and RHCE Exams. I've been a linux sysadmin for a while, but reading through a RHCE prep book suggests they'll be asking lots of inane stuff (what does this flag do?). What should I expect from the class & exam(s)?
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# ? Mar 21, 2013 16:43 |
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Scheduled my Cisco 350-001 (CCIE R&S Written Exam) today for the end of May, so we'll see how this goes. Anyone taken / passed the written within the last 6mths or so?
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# ? Mar 21, 2013 16:57 |
MC Fruit Stripe posted:What do you study for EMCISA? I don't even see books specifically geared for it, is it just the Information Storage and Management book? I guess I expected there to be more, that seemed pretty high level, I dunno. Hey emcisa, I'll be working on that soon with the yotj. What kinda stinks for me is if those new CCNA changes are coming, I need to finish my CCNA off while doing my emcsa and then emcisa. Oh well, guess its time to go see a doctor about my ADD and power through it with the power of
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# ? Mar 21, 2013 17:20 |
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Corvettefisher posted:You study for how various SAN stuff works, it is actually pretty cool stuff if you want detailed insight on how things work. Got that book from the SAN thread. Even if i'm not going to take the test, its a really good neutral book regarding storage infrastructure.
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# ? Mar 21, 2013 17:35 |
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oogs posted:So, I'm signed up for RH255 Red Hat System Administration III with RHCSA and RHCE Exams. I've been a linux sysadmin for a while, but reading through a RHCE prep book suggests they'll be asking lots of inane stuff (what does this flag do?). What should I expect from the class & exam(s)? Create a VirtualBox + CentOS lab at home and practice. One should be your infrastructure server with CIFS share, NFS share, iSCSI targets, a HTTP server, DNS server to resolve host names for your test lab, and a RPM repo. Install another couple VMs, take snapshots so you can roll back without re-install, and go to town. You will need to know inane stuff because the test is mostly about time management. You can use any documentation that's included with RHEL but digging through man pages will chew up your time. You should also seriously consider NOT taking the test right after the class. I've done Linux for a long time but there's no way I could cram that weird stuff (SELinux, LUKS) into my brain that quickly - maybe you configure Apache by hand daily but it's a rarity for me. Last thing is to read the RHCE objectives carefully. On the objectives page those 5 bullet points under the Network Services section apply to ALL services so make sure you know how to do those 5 things for every service on the test.
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# ? Mar 21, 2013 20:00 |
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hackedaccount posted:Create a VirtualBox + CentOS lab at home and practice. One should be your infrastructure server with CIFS share, NFS share, iSCSI targets, a HTTP server, DNS server to resolve host names for your test lab, and a RPM repo. Install another couple VMs, take snapshots so you can roll back without re-install, and go to town. Thanks. I didn't realize the test had to be scheduled separately - I just figured it was day 5 of the course. The SELinux stuff will definitely require some attention on my part.
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# ? Mar 22, 2013 00:25 |
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Just to be clear: You can A) Schedule it on day 5 or B) get a voucher and take it later if you want. Red Hat also offers individual exams and the voucher may or may not work for them - verify what I'm sayin with Red Hat, it's been a while. https://www.redhat.com/training/certifications/exam-kiosk/ Edited my clarification for clarification. hackedaccount fucked around with this message at 05:35 on Mar 22, 2013 |
# ? Mar 22, 2013 00:47 |
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Just passed A+802 by the scruff of the neck it's no joke make sure you have command line rock solid. And 801 make sure you know mobo components and wireless standards
LionYeti fucked around with this message at 20:21 on Mar 22, 2013 |
# ? Mar 22, 2013 18:48 |
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# ? May 16, 2024 18:47 |
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I just got my A+, now I want to work towards getting CCNA. I can take some preparation classes, but it is kind of confusing. Maybe a dumb question, but what (if any) classes should I sign up for?
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# ? Mar 22, 2013 20:23 |