• minnieo@kbin.socialOP
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    1 year ago

    any place that won’t hire you for being a WOC is a place that you wouldn’t want to work for anyway

    very true, guess im just worried about simply not getting hired at most places i apply to, but ill cross that bridge when i get to it

    look into the book “learn powershell in a month of lunches”

    thanks for the rec! currently looking into this and eager to learn :D

    find excuses to shoehorn it into stuff you’re doing at home

    this is me while learning javascript. any time any little thing inconveniences me, i make a script for it and solve the issue. it’s sooo fun.

    Imposter syndrome is just something you get used to after a while.

    understood, i think nearly everyone has this. fact of life.

    another question if you don’t mind, is an associates applied science degree going to work fine for me to find jobs? im worried it’s not enough, and in 2 years i will wish i had gone for a 4 year, idk. maybe this is too broad a question but throwing it out there anyway. im attaching my program for an idea of the things i’d be learning, if it is relevant or helpful to know

    • Unaware7013@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      another question if you don’t mind, is an associates applied science degree going to work fine for me to find jobs?

      I think it will depend on what your AAS is in, but it is definitely sufficient to find a good job. For example, I’ve only got an AAS (my local CC had a program for systems administration, I got that and took both the Linux and windows paths), and I’ve never felt that an AAS was holding me back/I needed a BS to move forward.

      My experience is that a degree of some kind is helpful to get you past the HR bots, but the people actually working in infrastructure don’t generally care. I’ve had waaaay more instances of a certification being required/needed for a position/raise/promotion. On that note, figure out what specialization you want to go down, and begin working on some certifications, and don’t be afraid to pick up certs in other specialties that interest you.

      I have/had certifications for Windows and networking, but I’ve never had a networking gig (officially. I was backup to my net admin at the 3 tech map I worked at). The knowledge has helped me figure out issues that stumped peers because they didn’t have much networking knowledge.

      If you’re looking to start out and don’t know what to go for, check out the CompTia site, they have a ton of good and entry level certs that you can use to figure stuff out or get a basic idea of other knowledge domains. I took A+ back in the day, and I really wish I would have gone with network+ at the time, but I got my ccna years later, so it probably wasn’t a big deal in the end. But it at least got me through the HR drones at my first gig.

      Looking over that course list, that’s actually a decent program from the looks of things. Gives you basics for windows, Linux, networking, desktop and security. Should cover all the major bases and help you figure out what track you want to go down. About the only other thing I took that I don’t see on your list is DBs, and I don’t blame anyone for not wanting to deal with DBs… SQL was my least favorite course.

      • minnieo@kbin.socialOP
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        1 year ago

        its in computer networking tech, thats what the program is called. hoping its enough, your answers have been encouraging. i bookmarked the CompTia website, will circle back to it when the time is right :D thank you so much for your thorough answers. they are endlessly useful for me, cause i’m sorta just winging it atm haha

        • jon@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          BS looks better than AAS, but honestly that’ll only really apply for your first couple jobs. Once you’ve got a few years of experience, your specific education matters less and less. I will say that a BS is “better” in terms of teaching you more, but your Associate’s credits will transfer if you ever decide to go that route.

          Also, once you pick up one language, you basically know them all (with some obvious exceptions). If you know PowerShell, you can pick up Bash pretty easy. If you know JavaScript, you can pick up Python. If you know Python, Java is pretty easy. If you know Java, you pretty much know C#. Learning a language becomes just figuring out how that languages does things. Picking up a new language goes from being a process that takes a year or two and schooling to taking maybe a week and watching some videos. There are some exceptions (Python doesn’t tell you much about SQL, and systems languages like C/C++ are their own animal).

        • Unaware7013@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          You’re welcome, glad I could help!

          And if it makes you feel any better, I’ve basically been winging it the whole way. Seems to be working out for me so far.