Re: [orca-list] Ot: does anyone have a certification from the Linux foundation?
- From: John Heim <john johnheim net>
- To: "B. Henry" <burt1iband gmail com>, Alex Midence <alex midence gmail com>, orca-list gnome org
- Subject: Re: [orca-list] Ot: does anyone have a certification from the Linux foundation?
- Date: Wed, 9 Mar 2016 16:35:41 -0600
To be clear, I didn't say companies are leaving important positions
unfilled just because qualified candidates do not have a sheepskin. I
said the UW is doing that and the point was not so much to say that you
need to get a degree. It was that there is a shortage of linux systems
admins around here. In fact, you could say positions are being left open
even in the private sector. I guess it depends on what you mean by
leaving a position open but I've talked to recruiters in the area where
I live. There are a lot of high tech companies around here and they have
open recruitment of linux systems admins. They are essentially always in
the market for people with those skills. I wouldn't say they are leaving
the positions open but they do nearly always have open positions.
On 03/09/2016 02:03 PM, B. Henry wrote:
Yes, I've heard that the Red Hat certs are porbably the most sought after too.
They are certainly something in your favor, and some companies that used to require a degree are moving away
from that, but you know how some folks and
organizations are with rules.
Anyway, trends are just that trends. They can change either slowly shifting or rather drastically overnight,
and not everyone goes along with the crowd.
I can't see a company leaving an important position unfilled for very long just because qualified candidates
do not have a sheepskin.
Just one more comment and I think I'll bow out of this conversation as it is OT and getting pretty long.
The one thing that I don't remember anyone mentioning but may have missed is private cloud deployment. Quite
a few orgs set up their own in house
colaboration systems. Knowing how to work with large google aps deployments and the like and other public
cloudy things can't hurt.
Free switch and asterix set-up is another one I want to get familiar with.
Learning how to learn efficiently is just as if not more important than learning a particular task or
software configuration.
Google is our friend, but getting used to working with man and info pages should not be neglected. There is a
lot of good and bad information out there,
and learning how to check it against official docs is vital.
Good discussion people/thanks again for the interesting thoughts and observations, and especially recent
experiences.
--
John Heim
john johnheim com
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