• 2 Posts
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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 3rd, 2023

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  • A+ Cert in IT is fairly basic and isn’t all that useful besides a general overview of some aspects of the field. However, the most valuable portion of the cert is on troubleshooting methodology and that carries you through the rest of your career. It’s pretty common in a nutshell, try known fixes to previous issues first, then work from simple solutions (check power/cable connections, reboot, etc) to more complex solutions (reformat disk, clean wipe, etc).

    The amount of times I’ve been on a million dollar salary engineering troubleshooting call and things like “checking that the credentials are working” get skipped in favor of looking for an issue in a newly written script is hilarious and happens far too frequently.

    It’s not that simple solution are necessarily the most likely but that you can rule them out quickly.

    It’s a skill like you say, just funny how that cert always comes to mind (it’s the entry level cert for IT for people not familiar).





  • It’s good to learn your security concepts, schooling should help with that. After that, I would gravitate towards learning the security around newer commercially viable but immature technology and seek positions around that area whether in security or not. To me, if I was just starting out I’d look towards AI and Machine Learning, which isn’t a very unique answer but probably the correct one for the fastest advancement in this path. Learn the different types of models, learn what kind of attacks their susceptible to, the security controls and mitigation techniques for defending these systems. It changes frequently, pay attention to Github’s trending section to see where the tech world’s focus is as a decent barometer of where things are heading (not necessarily where things currently but going towards).

    Overall security is needed everywhere so get a taste of a lot flavors and see which ones you like best, you’ll likely be able to find a job there.




  • I’ve been visiting English speaking countries and kind of scouting where might be a good option if America had a serious issue. Canada would be my first choice because of proximity and shared values. New Zealand #2, then probably UK or Ireland.

    I’m a cybersecurity professional with a lot of experience and I hope that would be welcomed in most countries but idk. I don’t want to move, and would stick around for a bit to see initially how things go but if it kicks right back to 2020’s level of insanity I’m 100% out.