Toughest certifications
Comments
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earweed Member Posts: 5,192 ■■■■■■■■■□CCIE (any of them), GSE, and high-end Juniper exams represent what I would consider personal technical challenges.No longer work in IT. Play around with stuff sometimes still and fix stuff for friends and relatives.
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Forsaken_GA Member Posts: 4,024Networkers are the plumbers of the Internet. That's why they're always blocking access and performing DNS flushes (push, push those packets through).
Well, if there's one thing that years of playing Nintendo has left me with is that being a plumber isn't so bad, there's a pretty girl waiting for you. You just need to find the right castle. -
veritas_libertas Member Posts: 5,746 ■■■■■■■■■■Forsaken_GA wrote: »Well, if there's one thing that years of playing Nintendo has left me with is that being a plumber isn't so bad, there's a pretty girl waiting for you. You just need to find the right castle.
That has to be one of the best quotes I have seen, rep points for you! -
slinuxuzer Member Posts: 665 ■■■■□□□□□□so I'm not sure how people make it through the CISSP exam.
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RouteThisWay Member Posts: 514But for me, I didnt want to pave the roadway (network), i wanted to drive the sports car (servers) on it.
Nice!"Vision is not enough; it must be combined with venture." ~ Vaclav Havel -
Forsaken_GA Member Posts: 4,024But for me, I didnt want to pave the roadway (network), i wanted to drive the sports car (servers) on it.
If living in Atlanta has taught me one thing, it's that if the roads aren't properly maintained, it doesn't matter what you're driving. You can be driving a Porsche if you want, you're still stuck in traffic next to the Dodge Shadow.
And of course there's always the perk that you can put in your own express lane and make sure nobody else can use it -
mikedisd2 Member Posts: 1,096 ■■■■■□□□□□Forsaken_GA wrote: »And of course there's always the perk that you can put in your own express lane and make sure nobody else can use it
Hah! I just installed a BES server and it crashed and burned coz it couldn't navigate merging lanes. I'd rather be paving the road any day. What good's a sports car if you don't know the terrain? -
Hyper-Me Banned Posts: 2,059I guess my vote would be Understanding Women.
IF it were a certification, it would have a 100% failure rate. -
TheShadow Member Posts: 1,057 ■■■■■■□□□□I guess my vote would be Understanding Women.
IF it were a certification, it would have a 100% failure rate.
One thing is there would be zero **** sites.Who knows what evil lurks in the heart of technology?... The Shadow DO -
Deathgomper Member Posts: 356 ■■■□□□□□□□Forsaken_GA wrote: »you're still stuck in traffic next to the Dodge Shadow.
That would be me. I used to drive a green Dodge Shadow, it was so filled with garbage my friends dubbed it "The Garbage Sled." -
Slowhand Mod Posts: 5,161 ModI'm not sure if there's a specific brand.... but I'd say the hardest certification exams are the ones on subjects you have no interest in.
Other than that, I'd say that the toughest exams I've taken are ones involving subjects that I don't have as much experience with. This was true for Trigonometry, it was true for the CCNA, and it's probably going to be true for every future test I take; if it's not something I'm already into, it's going to be tougher to learn about.
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Mike-Mike Member Posts: 1,860man, those are some expensive certs listed... how do people pay for that? is that something the individual pays out of pocket? or if you're that high up is that something your company pays for?Currently Working On
CWTS, then WireShark -
Bl8ckr0uter Inactive Imported Users Posts: 5,031 ■■■■■■■■□□man, those are some expensive certs listed... how do people pay for that? is that something the individual pays out of pocket? or if you're that high up is that something your company pays for?
I think that every time I hear someone taking a SANS cert. $900 a challenge and 2K+ with a class is nothing to laugh at. -
Paul Boz Member Posts: 2,620 ■■■■■■■■□□Bl8ckr0uter wrote: »I think that every time I hear someone taking a SANS cert. $900 a challenge and 2K+ with a class is nothing to laugh at.
Usually 3k+ for the class itself. In my case I've had my employer pay for two of mine. I paid for the GSEC challenge out of pocket. At my last job (where Dynamik works now) you get a $4k annual training budget. I blew my first year's on the GCFW and got a 25% discount on the GCIH. I used the other $1000 on Cisco certs. Basically my employer paid for $7000 and I paid for $1000. I paid for my GCFW gold paper attempt out of pocket but its only a few hundred by comparison. My new employer is paying for GCIA, Cisco IPS training, and ArcSight architecture / administration training next year. I have to do one non-vendor specific (which is where the SANS training comes in) and one vendor-specific. I'm doing two vendor-specific b/c I need to learn ArcSight more but my boss wants to send me to that outside of my training budget. I'm looking at around $12k in training in 2011.CCNP | CCIP | CCDP | CCNA, CCDA
CCNA Security | GSEC |GCFW | GCIH | GCIA
pbosworth@gmail.com
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Blog: http://www.infosiege.net/ -
Bl8ckr0uter Inactive Imported Users Posts: 5,031 ■■■■■■■■□□So the trick is to get good enough that they will pay for training for you lol. I got it. Well that isn't going to happen at my current shop
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tpatt100 Member Posts: 2,991 ■■■■■■■■■□I was tempted to pay for one of the GIAC Security training classes out of pocket. Not because I can afford it but since I am taking the CISA in December I wanted a GIAC security cert to round out the well known security certs.