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GT-Rob wrote: Only because of the 50 CCNAs or so, I would say about 3 or 4 got them without braindumps. And it shows.
GT-Rob wrote: As ironic as it sounds I probably value certs the least at my work. Only because of the 50 CCNAs or so, I would say about 3 or 4 got them without braindumps. And it shows.
_maurice wrote: No one at my work respects certifications. wtf. Anybody else get that feeling at their work? Here's a story. Someone at work was trying to figure out why he couldn't apply a multicast address as a source ip addres on a stateful firewall access rule. He was tryin for a really long time. I here him askin other people about it and I say, that it is because a multicast address is always a destination address. He argues that a multicast address is in both the source and destination in the ip header. I'm like, think about it, whats that gonna do, how is that logical. I ran a packet capture while pinging 224.0.0.1, and was like see! I also run a 'show ip mroute' on a cisco. He says well, I never needed to know this, I don't have any certs. I said, IT SHOWS!
srcurrie wrote: I have run into a couple of opinions. When I got my first cert (A+) I was one of the only people with any cert at all. Many times I heard "you were the only interview with any certifications". I have been working with computers for many years starting back in 1982 but only became certified in 1998. I was also told once while studying for a new cert that none of my studying will matter because certs are only for getting a job!! I was also told that people with certs do not know anything. Keep in mind that they were thinking of NT4 days when Microsoft was handing out MCSE's left and right and the "engineers" could not solve easy routing problems or DNS issues etc. In fact because of this attitude and the discovery of Novell Netware I became a CNA as my second cert. CNA got me a better job. It DID make a difference. Any reluctance on the part of people could quickly be dispelled when I could show them what I knew. I began working in a much bigger Novell shop. This network was relatively new. several humdreds PCs and printers, etc. Anything on the internet dialed out via Modem. Even the servers dialed each other to deliver mail! They had new network wiring and a public class c range. Not enough IPs for all PCs so they assigned them to important people and staticed them. The original people knew nothing of DNS, DHCP, NAT etc. When I first started working there I was not listened too when the person who outranked me said "we are not ready to give Internet access to everyone". I said you have everything you need already. I was overruled. After a couple of weeks I decided I would give a demo and brought in my own personal Netware 5.1 server. I sat it up witha public IP and a private IP and enabled routing between the NICsand set up DNS, NAT and DHCP. Then a call came in and I ran across the hall to fix a classroom's printer. After a few minutes my boss came bursting through the door. She told me that an entire lab was on the Internet and that lab had no public IPs set. I explained to her that we never needed any more than 1 IP to put the whole network on the Internet. Needless to say I was certified and the rest were not. Oh, I honestly meant to just demo my server to my boss. Not just willy-nilly put the whole network on the Internet. Lately I have been getting several certs and that has led to another job change and a big raise. They do matter.
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