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ryanshafer wrote: » I am just trying to get "IN". Not sure of what avenue I am looking towards. I just like computers. I am completing a cert program in GIS (Geographical Information Systems) but with out real world experience......not sure about that. Did the graphics things for 8 yrs. and that has gone to crap. So I am really motivated to do what it takes to get into IT. I want kids soon so I need to figure out a path and run with that. I am wondering how long it will take to get the MCITP cert? I wanna start with Windows 7 or A+ so I have something to show on my resume. Any idea's of what 1 or 2 certs would be best to complete and go from there?
rogue2shadow wrote: » First off, welcome to TE! In response to your post, it really comes down to where you see yourself 5, 10, and 15 years later as well as what you currently work with. Give us a little more about you and where you are now and I'm sure we'll be able to provide you with detailed advice of some sort. For now, I'll give you my 2 cents on each of the certs you mentioned. Based on your description you may not need the A+ exam to validate your break/fix abilities. Attaining the cert might be nice but if you have five years of experience in PC repair, that experience speaks for itself. If you plan to be a professional technician as your mainstream career, the A+ and your experience will prove pivitol in making yourself marketable (as well as the MCITP:EDST and other desktop support certifications) The L+ is a beautiful cert and is transitioning/already has roots with the LPIC-1 objectives. First and foremost, L+ is vendor neutral so these exams give you knowledge across distro types (Debian vs RHEL etc.). If you take Linux+ before October I believe, you will still fall under the old objectives. If you choose to go straight to the newer objectives that is a choice too. If you love Linux and might be getting into Unix administration of some sort then this along with the Red Hat Linux cert paths might be something to look at (RHCT, RHCE). The Windows 7 exam by itself won't be a career changer but in combination with a Microsoft track it can prove great. For example, go for either MSCA, MSCE, or MCITP. The MSCA and MSCE paths are based on the Windows 2003 architecture and some of the specialty exams are expiring soon so I would hop on it if thats the path you choose. The Windows 7 exam serves as a client side exam for anyone of these tracks and will give you experience with either Windows Server 2003 or 2008.
tearofs wrote: » If you are talking about getting a job in IT. A+ most likely won't do it unless you are that lucky in the current job market. The best keys to open the door (get interviews) are CCNA & MCSE. Neither of them are easy tasks. It WILL take months to complete. Now, I only mentioned about getting interviews, what about a job offer without years of experineces on your resume? You must have something EXTRA to offer during interview beside the CCNA & MCSE papers, and I will leave that to you to figure out ...
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