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Chipsch wrote: » Wanted to make an inquiry to all of you guru's out there and see what your experiences may have been like working in a data center for a hosted service provider as a network engineer. . . . Only takes an hour and ten minutes roughly as well.
ITdude wrote: » Maybe, they will let you work remotely from time to time.
Everyone wrote: » That most likely would have been mentioned in the interview process. A Network Engineer role would most likely require quite a bit of physical access to the equipment, so probably not likely just because of the nature of the work being done.
networker050184 wrote: » Why would a network engineer require physical access? In all my time as an engineer I never once touched a physical piece of equipment besides some lab work. Definitely no more access then required by a systems engineer. I agree it probably would have been mentioned though. To the OP, good luck! Sounds like they were impressed.
Chipsch wrote: » Wanted to make an inquiry to all of you guru's out there and see what your experiences may have been like working in a data center for a hosted service provider as a network engineer. Reason I ask is that I had a phone interview last Friday and a face to face today. Face to face totaled 3 hours with 2 of it in person and another hour on the phone with different people. Went well and they are already moving onto references. So looks like this is moving pretty fast. Only downside is that my commute will be bumped to 63 miles each way. Gotta love the 40mpg I get on the Civic though. Only takes an hour and ten minutes roughly as well.
Turgon wrote: » Sounds like a good opportunity. My advice to anyone working in IT now is to apply for as many senior positions as you can, try and land one, work your ass off and try and hang in there. Once you have a 12 month footprint of holding a senior position down your employability stakes rise. It's a hard school that doesn't suffer fools. The lower ranking jobs are a diminishing currency now. As for the work, depends on the shop, but expect long hours, meetings and lots of pressure on crisis calls where you will have to lead and resolve serious technical situations. You will not go home and read books to prepare for more exams. You will be too tired.
Chipsch wrote: » Thanks for the always helpful advice Turgon. As for being to tired for exams, the President of the company would like to see me with a written pass over the next few months and sitting the practical within the first 18 month deadline. Some luxuries will probably have to be pushed to the side for a while. I suppose these upcoming days and evenings could feel like 15 months of a sandbox all over again. *shudder*
Turgon wrote: » well done man!
Everyone wrote: » Congrats! Wow they still have 6509s? I'm not a networking guy, but I remember helping to take a bunch of old 6509s to certify their destruction 4 or 5 years ago, and they were old back then! Good luck in your job!
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