[ale] Breaking into the field [Inquiry]

Chuck Payne terrorpup at gmail.com
Sat Sep 23 22:46:11 EDT 2017


Guys,

I started out at a help desk, some 27 years ago. The one thing that helped
me is hard work, never saying no, keeping an open mind, and pushing myself
to keep learning.

The only regret I have I never learn a program language, so if you can't
join on of the free online course.

I would as well recommend coming to the meetings, asking questions here on
the mailing list. A lot of the greybeards know a thing or too. I don't mind
helping, feel free to ask question. Don't get stuck with one distro, many
people install Ubuntu, but the market is more geared more toward Red Hat
so, install CentOS or Fedora. Even better, Arch Linux because they have a
wiki that is the best to learn really thing. If you really want to learn,
try Slackware.

Devops is the hot thing, so try to read up on Puppet, Chef, Salt Stack or
Ansible. Free IT Athens rebuild old PC with Linux on, see if there is
something in your community you can do some free IT work. Volunteer work
counts as much a paid job. My first job was an Interm at TV station for two
years, with no pay, but I learned so much.

You can set up a small home network on the cheap. For $100 bucks you can
buy like 3 or 4 Pi and setup file server, media server, and workstations.
You don't need expensive hardward to learn, and labs are so great, if you
have a laptop install VirtualBox it's free an a great to run other
os without having to buying equipment.

Amazon use to let you have a free account, it's a great way to learn AWS,
which is another hot skill to have.

Keep notes, Google is great, but if you are working on a system with no
internet access, notes are great to help, no one going to look down on you
for having them, they are more like to look down on you for not having
notes.

Remember this, there are no stupid questions, so don't be afraid to ask.

On Sat, Sep 23, 2017 at 10:22 PM, Antony Natale <antonynatale at gmail.com>
wrote:

> As someone who is pretty new to the field I can only offer what I did but
> frankly I feel my success is equal parts hard work and luck. I was working
> in retail for years, mostly in print  when I decided I was going to pursue
> my new found passion. I had worked on getting some certifications to try
> and get some entry level help desk work being my only experience was
> personal, not work related. After a year of applying I got nothing.
>
> A year later I decided to go back to school for an IT degree and started
> applying again and got lucky and nailed a great desktop support job for an
> insurance company. Maybe it was the promise of a degree or coincidence, who
> knows. Only complaint was there was zero linux. So I focused on learning
> all I could there, and outside of work learned all I could about linux
> through reading, VM labs, Linux academy, just doing all I can.
>
> Finally, thanks to the ALE, a job posting came for a junior admin position
> saying they would take entry level. I didn't expect to get it but I did and
> I think its only because I could get through 50 minutes of various Linux
> related grilling and show how passionate I was about the job.
>
> So my suggestion is do all you can on your own, setup labs and vms, etc
> and shoot for the entry level jobs, and be ready to commit some time to
> learn because in the end my life is so much better for it. Thanks for
> getting me the job ALE!
>
> Sorry for the novel
>
> Sent from BlueMail <http://www.bluemail.me/r?b=10698>
>
> _______________________________________________
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> Ale at ale.org
> http://mail.ale.org/mailman/listinfo/ale
> See JOBS, ANNOUNCE and SCHOOLS lists at
> http://mail.ale.org/mailman/listinfo
>
>


-- 
Terror PUP a.k.a
Chuck "PUP" Payne
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