This was pretty much how all my contract interviews went. We have this virus what do yout think? Then I bust out about Viral Messiah and F-PROT etc. and then rolled up on some other problems he was having and I got the job. A year later after the contract ended I went to another interview and got that one as well. But the job field does suck now. I have 3 yrs of school and after my new house is built I will go back but this time I am going after a game delvelopers degree that is artist/writer/story board, creative side not programmer per se. I have had enough of this Senior Dekstop Analyst role. They pay me well and they even pay for my school but overall I could give a s*** about learning anythig else about networking, secruity, Winbloze etc. I am sick of it after 8 yrs. I love games and got this job becuase I had to learn everything about contempary desktop computing to game. s***, in the DOS days you had to know everything about your hardware, OS, and the network to get those bastards to talk to each other or to even run. So in a way I am just going back to my roots. The game industry is larger than the Motion Picture industry and it has been growing about 40% a year. I love to write and have a creative mind. My passion is for games and that is were I am going.Micah said:Personally, I refuse to take any certs. If a company wanted to pay for them, sure I would take the course and the test. I just think it's a racket now. Cisco certs are still fairly reputable but the only ones that are worth having are very very hard.
My last job interview - which got me the consultants position where I am at this very moment - the guy never even asked if I had any certs. He and I went back and forth discussing hardware and software - and I got the job. Familiarize yourself with as much hardware as you can. Read whitepapers and spec sheets on HP's website. If you have the means, purchase and install a used DLT drive and learn to use backup software such as Veritas and Brightstor. Learn Raid, subnetting, vpn, voip, and most importantly get a basic understanding of cisco hardware. When you can put all that on your resume - you should not have a hard time finding a job.
"my tech job went to India and all I got was this T-Shirt"MisterT said:Yeah the outsourcing thing is very scary! I see every thing from computer jobs to manufacturing jobs (car, furniture, etc.) going overseas to China and India and even Mexico. Kenwood Audio is assembled in Meheeckoe as well as GM trucks. My dad's 2001 Tahoe was assembled there. It's a catch 22! It saves the consumer money, but yet the consumer loses his job so that it can go overseas. I job paying ~ $18 an hour here can be done for $2 overseas. Even with shipping, it still comes out cheaper. Cheap ass industries. (butt)
Wow linux, that really stinks about the job situation. I managed to get into where I am because of my brother. He went to school, I didn't. Skill set wise though, we are pretty close. I've got the odd knowledge that lets me solve problems in a few seconds that other admins struggle with for weeks. He's got the attention to detail and can tell you where settings can be changed on just about any piece of cisco, sun, linux, win2k, winnt, novell machine. Together, we make a pretty good team, and currently work the same schedule at both jobs.LinuxRacr said:I will have to agree that experience or personel networking is key. In 1999 I was 19 years old, and moving boxes in a FedEx warehouse. Someone I worked there with had a sister who was a manager at the Baylor Healthcare's IT Operations center in Dallas. I went into the interview all confident that my computer knowledge I had aquired on my own would woo them. Boy was I surprised to see all this hardware, and all of the OS's that I had never seen before!Well, by the grace of God they hired me (little did I know that the turnover rate there was HORRENDOUS!!!). After 2 months, I was the senior operator there. (hmm) I stayed there for 9 months, and then moved into the job I'm in now for a large Wireless company. I got this job by the grace of God due to my age, and my little experience. When I was at my previous job, I started using Linux heavily at home, and taught myself Unix protocols. I had to learn everything myself there because management sucked there at the time. You got knowledge, folks got scared. About a year ago we got the news that we were possibly gonna be outsourced to India. A few months later, our counterparts in another state got some "guests" from India to train as a part of a Pilot program. The go/no-go date keeps getting pushed back due to "technicalities."
This industry is very rough right now, and I don't know where I can find a job making what I make now. I'm basically a Jr. Admin without the title.
Business Owners and middle managers have statistically higher stress levels and are more prone to health problems due to job related stress.Jliao said:If you're in the IT field, you WILL always be working for someone.
I have change the way I see things now. Now, I want some people to listen to me and even better if they work for me. Primarily in some sort of business management.
LinuxRacr said:This article is reality for my department...
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=677&ncid=677&e=1&u=/usatoday/20040406/bs_usatoday/workersaskedtotrainforeignreplacements