Lord Nikon wrote: » I've noticed and I wont point any fingers, but say in general, it seems a lot of people are down on compTIA certs, such as A+, N+ and S+. I am curious as to why these certs, people don't care about anymore? I am just asking, because I've been out of the IT field for 8 years or so, and coming back into it, but I remember that everyone was all about the A+ and compTIA certs... Thanks, Not starting wars here, just curious.
mikedisd2 wrote: » Over here, it seems no one has even heard of CompTIA certifications. And they're really expensive ($450 compared with $180 for MS certs).
NetworkingStudent wrote: » I didn’t like the fact that at first Comp Tia decide to strip candidates of their lifetime certification status. A lot of these candidates got certified a year or more ago. Later on they changed their tuned and decided to give people a year to pursue their certifications and still keep life time status.
Devilsbane wrote: » That is another reason that CompTIA certifications are looked on to be lower certifications. The fact that I could get A+ in 2000 and then not touch a computer again for the rest of my life but still call myself A+ certified on my resume until the day I died. Anyone who received their A+/Net+/Sec+ for life will still have it for life. But the new people getting it will need to renew. This should make having a CompTIA cert more valuable.
RobertKaucher wrote: » I think most people are going to agree with me here that the first course focusing on the CompTIA certs is probably going to be best from a career standpoint as it is the broadest. Not only is that course going to be of more interest from an employement perspective but I think it will make the MCITP: EA exam easier on you and I don't think that will really be the same in reverse.
RobertKaucher wrote: » ...the more abstract conceptual knowledge provided by the CompTIA exams (and even to a certain degree in the CCNA) will help you to understand the MS technologies it is much harder to go from the specific to the abstract.
N2IT wrote: » My Security + is a CE all the others are lifetime. I tend to agree that the new CE format is better for the certification. I won't have a problem re upping my certificate when the time comes. However I am completely focused on ITIL now. 100% well and finance and stats. Project + (2003) was one of the most challenging exams I have ever taken.
veritas_libertas wrote: » My biggest complaint is the ridiculous yearly fee. I'm sorry, but I don't believe the value is worth paying yearly for. Now if I had a CISSP/SSCP that would be something entirely different.
brad- wrote: » I can tell you why I'm so down on them but i cant speak for anyone else. I did the A+ and Net+. Those three exams cost around $600 - not counting study materials, but they were lifetime certs. Im fine paying a little more for not having it expire so i can have that fodder on my resume forever. I was in the process of studing Sec+ when they decided to willy nilly make everything expire in 3 years. They recanted on that to let us keep the lifetime certs already done, and changed their stance to begin making all their certs expire from a certain date forward. Things came up with work and i never was able to finish sec+ before the lifetime cert exams went away...so im a little peaved about that. Now that they expire, they're not worth much of anything to me because no one i've looked at specifically wanted their certs. Cisco and MS certs have the same expiration policy, but employers are looking for them and they have much more credibility - and they cost less. Not to mention if you go into the cisco track, each time you pass a test, you renew every cert under it.
Lord Nikon wrote: » wow 600 dollars for the two? I Remember back in 1998 I was doing the A+, because it was all the rage, and the tests were only $100. Wow how prices have jumped up.
Devilsbane wrote: » A recent thread was created by a new member to our forums who was requesting some guidance on where to go. Below is the advice that Robert gave him. .... If Robert says to get a CompTIA cert, I'd go get a CompTIA cert.