NightShade03 wrote: » That's a great area to be in for any kind of IT work, although Linux seems to be pretty popular as well. The most important thing is going to be experience. If she has none she will need to take some certs like the Linux+ or LPIC series to compensate for lack of experience. She will have a hard time finding a job with no experience *however* she should apply everywhere because someone will eventually give her a chance and that's her foot in the door.
brownwrap wrote: » Find a job these days is tough, with or without experience. I had plenty and it was still rough. While I was out of work, I tried a lot of things I hadn't worked on. One thing I found was "Linux From Scratch". Building your own Linux using whats out there in Open Source. A great learning tool.
Ryuksapple84 wrote: » Thanks guys, well it seems like she wants to jump on the Cisco wagon with me. But I am still interested in going for Linux eventually. recommend any good books?
Slowhand wrote: » She should start by looking at an entry-level certification that'll give her a nice introduction and overview of Linux. Right now, CompTIA has partnered with LPI to make the Linux+ cert and the LPIC-1 certs one and the same. Linux+ has always been a great place to start, so picking up two certs in one shot isn't a bad deal at all. After that, she'll have a pretty solid foundation in Linux. The LPIC-1/Linux+ exams don't focus on one particular distro, but she'll definitely be familiar with Red Hat, Debian, and Slackware, if not also Ubuntu, after working through the study material and getting some hands-on practice. After that, if she wants to continue climbing the vendor-neutral LPI ladder and go for LPIC-2 and LPIC-3, or perhaps go for something like Red Hat's RHCT or RHCE, she'll have no trouble proving her expertise and will definitely raise her chances of finding a job she'll enjoy.
Chris:/* wrote: » The reason the commands are similar is because the Cisco IOS is based on BSD Unix. The CompTIA Linux+ has two exams now that also earn you the LPIC-1 and you can then petition Novell to earn CLA because you have earned LPIC-1.
zeratul wrote: » in my opinion, man & info pages + config files are still the best reading materials. I would start with reading 'info coreutils' and 'info bash'. just my 0.002 cent
WillTech105 wrote: » Gotcha. I scheduled my ICND2 exam this Monday and I feel 110% prepared for it. In the meantime I am getting a headstart on Linux+. I installed Fedora and I am reading the Sybex Study Guide. Finished chapter 1 and I am like "....what?". I'm not bothering with the "details" yet since I'm sure after playing around with it I will get what the book is saying. I am sure this has been asked amillion times but is there any other good matierla to study for the L+?
WillTech105 wrote: » Speaking of -- after finishing my CCNA I want to take on the Linux+ since it seems alot of its commands go hand in hand. I looked on CompTIA's site it looks like I need to take 2 exams to get Linux+ and I can take either the LPI or CompTIA version. Anyone mind clearing up which is what? Thanks
mrphantuan wrote: » +1 for Kaucher's observation. Ladies seem to get along with SQL quite well.
Pash wrote: » Because SQL is logical and it involves queries
mrphantuan wrote: » +1 for Kaucher's observation. Ladies seem to get along with SQL quite well. Chris, UNIX admin handbook was published 2000, isn't it a bit outdated?
Forsaken_GA wrote: » use husband: select answer from husband.brain where question='Does this make me look fat?'; + + | answer | + + | Of course, now hurry up already! | + + 1 row in set (0.00 sec) drop database husband;