cyberguypr wrote: » Any one of 680, 685, or 686 by themselves give you a Microsoft Certified Professional status. If you complete all of them you get that plus MCITP: Enterprise Desktop Support Technician on Windows 7 and MCITP: Enterprise Desktop Administrator on Windows 7. So 3 designations total.
SojuBrewMaster wrote: » Hey SweetMachine, First of all thank you very much for the detailed explanation! My "potential" employer wants me to get these certs in. But with the MCITP expiring in a few months I wonder what the reasoning is behind the requirement. I understand the adoption to Windows 8 isn't gonna be the quickest thing in the world but 3 1/2 months? Also Shoutout to everybody who also responded. Thanks for taking care of this noob!
SweenMachine wrote: » The MCITP retires, the MCSA doesn't. The MCSA is the more current version of the same certification essentially. The only difference is if you take the 686, the MCITP retires but the 686 is not an MCSA qualification. If you took the 685, you get the MCSA and MCITP -- The MCITP retires and becomes legacy, but the MCSA lives on as current. A lot of people didn't notice or see the changes, these are pretty recent changes. My employer told me to go get the MCITP and the 681 to meet qualifications for their partner status. I did my own research and showed them they changed the qualifications in Jan... -scott
srabiee wrote: » The 680+686 will also yield the MCSA: Windows 7. That's the route I went.MCSA: Windows 7 Certification | Microsoft Click the link called "Additional options and information."