Hearted Youtube comments on NetworkChuck (@NetworkChuck) channel.
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I'd just like to interject for a moment.
What you're referring to as Linux,
is in fact, GNU/Linux, or as I've recently taken to calling it, GNU plus Linux.
Linux is not an operating system unto itself, but rather another free component
of a fully functioning GNU system made useful by the GNU corelibs, shell
utilities and vital system components comprising a full OS as defined by POSIX.
Many computer users run a modified version of the GNU system every day,
without realizing it. Through a peculiar turn of events, the version of GNU
which is widely used today is often called "Linux", and many of its users are
not aware that it is basically the GNU system, developed by the GNU Project.
There really is a Linux, and these people are using it, but it is just a
part of the system they use. Linux is the kernel: the program in the system
that allocates the machine's resources to the other programs that you run.
The kernel is an essential part of an operating system, but useless by itself;
it can only function in the context of a complete operating system. Linux is
normally used in combination with the GNU operating system: the whole system
is basically GNU with Linux added, or GNU/Linux. All the so-called "Linux"
distributions are really distributions of GNU/Linux.
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Wicked stuff! I passed my CCNP Route almost a month ago and gaining close to book my Switch... For my CCNA, I used CBT Nuggets, Udemy Chris Bryant, Todd Lammle (only used it as a reference if I didn't like an explanation in the Press Book), and a few other books like the TCP/IP Volume 1. (Also bought the Boson practice software which REALLY showed my weak areas)
I also used packet tracer in my CCENT but stopped at my CCNA because although its only a simulation, it is a hassle because you're going to run into things not working and you'll think its a configuratioin issue but turns out its a limitation in packet tracer. GNS3 was a pain to set up the VM first time, but if you can follow some simple instructions then its easy to obtain IOS images somewhere ;)
If people are planning to go onto CCNA then CCNP in the same area, then don't slack on specific areas (eg. you mentioned about SNMPv3... I done similar with DMVPN/VRF and got hammered with questions which made me fail first time). It makes sense to focus more on EIGRP/OSPF/BGP for the CCNP route but I think you'd agree that all the previous knowledge and fundamentals with TCP/UDP operations and how Layer 3 works behind the scenes is an important area when you get into the CCNP knowledge.
People really have to stand out now with all these brain dumps flying around everywhere but I personally think people shouldn't worry to much since most braindumpers would be spotted from a mile away at an interview.
Things like subnetting should come natural when you hit the CCNA/CCNP studies, once you have the correct technique (even if people find themselves bad at maths) you'll do subnetting in your head for a /19 under 5 seconds. Knowing each subnet, the IPs that can be used etc..
CBT Nuggets - Jeremy is sooooo enthusiastic, I really love him and he gets me hyped up for the most boring topics although sometimes during my CCNA studies I thought 'stop with the funny remarks.../jokes..', it did get annoying at a point but I just got over it and he does settle down ;)
Udemy Christa Bryant - I thought his videos were the bomb! I would normally watch him if I wanted a 'not so indepth' introduction to topics when I'd want to relax but see some real world examples. He does try to talk about real world examples and experiences related to some topics.
The official cert guides - You can't go wrong with this as a supplementary study resource. This really goes into the big boy depths on topics and kinda keeps you on track so you don't go spending time on topics that isn't really in the exam objectives. It can get a bit boring but this is where the theory is at (good picture examples too)
TCP/IP Volume 1 - This is more depth and is brilliant for the CCNP level but I did find myself going to this if I was generally interested in diving a bit deeper into a specific topic. Remember that its all good and dandy to dive extremely deep into a topic, but don't look too deep into a topic where you'll end up with a tunnel vision and spending all your time on BGP for example. Compared to the objectives, you literally just need to know the basic fundamentals for BGP in the CCNA (but not for the CCENT so why bother looking into it now?)
There are so many resources available but I personally think you can't go wrong with INE, Official Cert Guide, Configuration guides/cisco white papers and a bit of google. (Also its great to get involved with communities and ask around, many skype/discord study groups which will help out on topics)
Also, I recommend people to not cram loads on the day before their exam (or even before going into the test centre). Relax the day before and have a good breakfast when you wake up for the exam day. I really love your videos Chuck, I hope you are doing well and good luck in the studies.
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Usually don't round up videos, but with this i had to get to the end of this video. Chuck i applaud your enthusiasm. Another tip i employ avoiding procrastination and staying focus studying for my CCNA R/S is by
1. Write out boldly in Capital letters the reason for pursuing this certification and with all optimism list out possible rewards; stuffs like $75k annually which can afford me getting a good car, save for a nice house and all those dreamy dreamy stuffs. You could have these pasted on your walls, your doors, bed edge, car dash board, kitchen, bathroom just any where you know your eyes frequent often. The more you see it, the more your brain registers it.
2. Self Development: What makes you better than yesterday is what you added to your faculty of knowledge today, so each day ask yourself by writing the question???? Did my brain learn anything new today? And don't forget to answer the question well scripted out on a sheet of paper, or card board paper.
3. Disturbing Reminder: This particularly works for me a lot. I set a reminder on my phone with my voice recording as the alarm tone for the reminder. Something like in a loud voice "Ezekiel go and study for your CCNA R&S so you can pass and earn that $75k" sounds funny but its true.
Lastly: Chuck has dully mentioned it which is the application known as Brain Focus (it is on Android play store as Brain Focus) an organisational tool that regulates, structure and keeps track of your study sessions.
I hope you find these tips useful and please reply with improved methods and tips to fight procrastination for better self sufficiency as regards IT certification pursuit.
Thank you
IG: @slimtalluche
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Hi Chuck, Not sure if you're still parsing through these comments. I just passed my CCENT (again), and a lot of your brother's advice and comments still apply. A couple of comments on some of the postings below:
- You're NEVER too old to get into IT/Networking. I've known guys in their 50's who got their CCNA and became Network Admins at companies. I'm working on re-cert for my CCNA a 3rd time. Why? The topics change (they removed frame relay for crying out loud, I thought I would never see the day).
- The CCNA is a great foundational cert to have, if you're debating CCNA vs. Net+, the CCNA will take you farther. The concepts can be applied to Software Defined Networking as well as other vendors' equipment. For example Dell PowerConnect switches are very similar, and if you know what's happening at the foundation you can configure Juniper gear too. Even firewalls like pfSense/Fortigate/Sophos can use VLANs, routing protocols, etc.
- Don't be scared of IPv6! The entire section in the 100-105 Cisco Press book is an excellent foundation for IPv6. While IPv4 won't be going away any time soon, most of us will probably be using dual-stack/6to4 (or vice versa) at some point.
- French press? Really? pffftt... Call me when you get a moka pot, rookie! hahaha
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IF you NEED A+, and you want an IT career, you should look for a different career path. If you are not "into" computers... You will be a mediocre IT person and essentially become one of the lame masses.
That said!
I 100% recommend A+ for anyone who is serious about computing or technology as a career or even as part of a hobby.
YOU CANNOT SUCCEED IN INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY WITHOUT A+ INFORMATION, unless you are a social engineer or a sales hack.
Sales hacks make plenty of money. No doubt. Social engineers like the greats Steve Jobs or Bill Gates are always coming out ahead of the genuine geeks... I'm not ashamed to admit that. But if you want an IT job, and you want to get into this stuff, DO YOURSELF A FAVOR and cultivate a passion for PCs before anything else. Build a PC from parts. Install Windows on it. Install Linux on it. Reinstall. Reconfigure. Reinstall. Tweak...
If this does not excite you, or you can't motivate yourself to enjoy doing this sort of thing for at least a year or so... You might not be cut out for IT.
(And this applies to those who think they are just going to be a Network Guy, or just gonna be a Database Administrator, or just gonna be the Call Center Telephony Systems Queen. I PROMISE YOU, being a competent PC person will serve you well. And I PROMISE YOU that if you move into those fields without this knowledge, you will feel like an idiot on more than one occasion, AND LOOK LIKE ONE ON MANY MORE THAT YOU AREN’T EVEN AWARE OF. And you may wonder why people don’t bring you in on any of the cool problems!)
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I absolutely think they're required nowadays - I got out of school with a degree in computer networking in 2000, when the biggest cert going around was the MCSE. It was tough finding work even back then (I don't live in a terribly tech-abundant city - it wasn't back then, and it still isn't today, but they are getting better.) Nobody was requiring certs to get hired, but there was a ton of competition.
Fast forward to a little over a year ago (and after many failed attempts to get a job in IT - my final one, I was really close, but they told me "You were the second choice - the other guy was certified and you aren't.") THAT'S when I had to start taking certs seriously. Managed to get into a local course teaching Network+/CCENT/CCNA. Got my N+ in March, CCENT in July and CCNA in August. Shortly thereafter, on recommendation from my instructor (again showing that it's not just certs - it's also who you know), I got hired for my first major job in IT in a really long time - junior networking role, and I couldn't be happier.
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As always, great video! But I disagree with just one point, the others are awesome though. I actually don't think you should study for A+, as studying stuff like - thermal printers, swollen batteries, spatial multiplexing, etc. will not help you get a job as a Helpdesk, Cloud Engineer or a DevOps engineer. I didn't know these things and I got accepted into a DevOps Engineer position after a little over a year as a HD technician. I studied materials taught in CCNA, LPIC-1, freecodecamp (C, Python, Groovy), AWS Solutions Architect, CKA, Azure Admin & Azure DevOps, and did a buttload of projects.
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That is some awesome initiative on your part young man! Keep up the good work and don't let the naysayers keep you down! As a man in my 40's, I can tell you with all of the learning I have done at the school of hard knocks, and the wisdom that only comes with age, if I had it all to do over again, I would have done much better in school and been more focused on figuring out what I want to do after high school instead of drifting and partying. Don't get me wrong, I had a lot of fun and don't regret much of that, but so many things come easy to me when I apply myself, I could have probably been very wealthy or retired by now if I had the focus to apply myself like you are now. Always keep learning new things, keep setting goals, don't worry about failure, most successful business people fail. What separates the really successful are the ones that keep trying until they succeed and don't quit when things don't go their way! I'll be sitting for my CCENT in late December or January most likely and hope to join you in the CCENT club!
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print("Hello, Welcome to Network~Chuck Coffee")
name = input("What is the name for your order? ")
print(f"Welcome {name}, thanks so much for stopping in today!\n")
menu = {'Black Coffee' : '2$',
'Latte' : '4$',
'Expresso' : '4$',
'Cappuccino' : '3$'}
print("Here is our menu, I'll give you a minute to look it over.")
print(menu)
print("\n\n")
order = input("Have you decided on what you would like this morning?\n")
if order == "Black Coffee":
print(f'Ok that will be 1 {order}, thanks so much, it will be right out!')
elif order == "Latte":
print(f"We sell {order}'s all the time, you will be impressed!")
elif order == "Expresso":
print(f"One {order}, coming right up!")
elif order == "Cappuccino":
print(f"Good choice, {order} is my favorite too! It will only be a minute!")
else:
print("I'm sorry we don't serve that.")
I love your series man, here is my take on the barista program. I'm only a few months into python be gentle lol!
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Sponsored video. You don't need to learn everything now. Learn one thing, be good at it, and when a job requires something new, learn that new thing. You can play and learn some things for fun, but learning something that you wouldn't use is stupid. I unsubscribed from almost every tech channel, they are all almost the same, just learn, learn, job, job, buy my new course and a bunch of sponsored videos. They just create pressure for people new in the IT field. Learn what you need and enjoy in life.
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Hi Network Chuck, thanks for making this video, I have a big passion to become a network engineer someday, I start to make my dream come true by studying for my CCENT, more about my background, I’m a tech support with A+ certified, but I am going to get a better life by becoming a network engineer one day. My fear of learning python takes me back to my school days when I really wanted to become a programmer someday but after I found how hard it is to learn coding, I withdrew ny programming class and burried my dream to be a programmer. But now when I learn about how network engineer needs to learn python, my trauma all came back to me, I remember the horror of when I ran a code and a bunch of error filled my screen, I just have to find my long burried passion back again, learning programming is like a young guy attracted to a very beautiful girl, but that guy is broke and every time he tries to talk to the girl his fear of rejections because of his confidence already fall apart before he even start talking to her 😂, I think I have to focus on CCENT first and see if I can learn python someday, thank you for the video
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Hey NetworkChuck, I am currently studying for my CCNA and despite the fact that thigs are going well,there is one thing that bothers me after:how do you deal with equipment not made by CISCO?I mean yes,they are the largest in this domain but there are also many more vendors, like Juniper,Ruckus , SOHO manufacturers out there and I am very afraid of meeting these devices and not knowing what to do.On top of that there is the world of custom firmwares,such as OpenWRT,DDWRT,Tomato,PFsense.monowall etc.What is your advice towards my problem?Thanks.
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Awesome Channel Mate! Here is what i suggest. First if you can go for Cisco Networking Academy because i found that netacad (this is website where Cisco Networking Academy Instructor will register you,and from where you will learn topics) contains material which is very very valuable,what i mean? well you will see that netacad material is very deep and contains biggest and interesting details which you wont find in books. I've got also Wendell Odom books and when i compare those two,i see that netacad is way better. + after every module you will have an exam and there is 4 modules,if you will finish academy with success they will give you a discount voucher which is also a benefit i think! Also i'm member of INE,i really suggest to purchase CCNA stuff from them because they have got a brilliant instructor Keith Bogart,i'm so happy that i found that instructor who explains subject and material very clearly and nicely,I remember when i was into academy and we were at Module 3, we were discussing topic called LAN Redundancy a.k.a Spanning-tree protocol which is huge protocol and belongs to switching section. If you don't know these protocol was invented by a woman :D so i was pretty scared when i looked it,i was like "oh man what is this?" but after watching videos from Keith now i''m confident that i know those huge topic pretty well,i think that only reading is nothing,you guys should watch videos. Don't think that i'm against CBT Nuggets,jeremy is also one of the greatest teachers really but if somebody asked "hey which one you would suggest?" i would say keith bogart,but it's up to you really which one you prefer.
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Esto es muy común, me ha pasado mil veces, sobre todo cuando estas en el mundo de IT que siempre hay tecnologías nuevas e innovadoras, siempre vez los videos y materiales de nuevas personas utilizándolas y siendo exitosos(o al menos eso parece), y no sabes dónde empezar o dejas las cosas a medias, o siempre los amigos o el mismo internet te sugiere que investigues algo nuevo, sé que es un error empezar muchas cosas y no terminar ninguna, y siempre está la incertidumbre de que si lo que estas estudiando, es lo mejor en el momento o lo más actualizado, o te invade el miedo de que cuando termines de estudiar esa tecnología fue suplantada por una nueva y mejor, ufff es estresante la verdad. He visto millones de videos motivacionales, pero la realidad es otra la vida es diferente, en esos momentos crees ver la luz, pero cuando chocas con el día a día y la realidad se torna más difícil.
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I needed this video! I'm finishing up an associate degree in cybersecurity this semester, but after that, I have 2 classes left to take and would get a second associate degree in computer programming (Java III and Advanced Systems Project class). part of my cyber degree was a cisco networking track (cisco netacad). I got good grades in that (best in the class, thank ya very much lol) but I doubted I was ready to take the cisco exam....and thus procrastinated too long that I'm going to miss the old ccna exam (will have to attempt the new CCNA sometime after the refresh). so, I figured, I'll work on network+ now too (and want to get Security+ after)....along with my cyber classes (which are all Linux focused classes) and Spanish 1. BUT, since I'm going back to programming degree (i was working on that before I decided to switch to cyber degree) next semester, I need to refresh my programming stuff: I know from talking to the programming professor that the 2 remaining classes will deal with Java, HTML, and SQL...so now I need to brush up on those too before May.
So, with all that I felt so overwhelmed that I just couldn't get myself to start anything, and I've just been procrastinating on anything that isn't my current classes, just because I have due dates on those classes that I have to get those done. I really need to just make the lists like you mention and prioritize my stuff. I know one thing I can do to help free up time is that one of my classes this semester is online, and all the assignments and labs are posted. So I can just start knocking out all those assignments so that this class is done except for the midterm and final. Then I guess the next thing is getting back into the programming stuff so that I am ready for next semester, THEN finish up my Network+/Security+....then by that time the new CCNA will be established and be able to prep for that.
Anyway.....thank you for this video. It came at just the right time for me.
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I am in same boat, we just had internet phones on our network which is VOIP back in the day, but I have to provide good internet connections. I was shocked when I saw my old PBS phones outside.. I hope this works..
1. Stop
Step away to recover, the mind set is bad.. pray and meditate and collect your thouthts
Exercise, that also worked... getting away from your mental stuck..
Putting stress to something else, it changes your mind set..
taking an emotional time out.
Your sad, upset, angry all this is tied in... smashing up a phone...
Watching a great movie as brave hart
Or watching a romantic movie with wife. Or robot wife
Stop step and disengage, spending time with friends
Family time or family robots time
You see your family and friends and make this better
Ask for help
What do you do?
Talk to your wife or robot wife
Getting that diffrent point of view, you see things differently
Step away play some video games.. don’t make it a habit..
2. Reset
Wrote down everything I need to do
Why I was having issues
I was balancing conenten and trying to do everything
I didnt’ have the list
Take that list and write a new list and write best thing for your time.
Clear head, to focus on my career, once you have that figured out and cut some things out..
What is on your plate..
you see what others are doing, your stuff is your y is your y...
Content, x, x. To much
Say no tho things
Do less
Accomplish more
Doing less is best
You have your list
Routine is goal of everything
When your overwhelmed you will not obey your routine and not working out doing this or that..
My routine was out of control
Set up my routine
Go slow and be ok with it... Go slow is the fastest thing you can do...
Its’ ok. The beginning is slow and take your time,if we go to fast we lose.. slow down and enjoy learning
Get it done get I’d done..
You have time
You might miss this or that.
You work hard there is always new opportunities
1. Stop
2. Reset
Emotional break family , pray and meditate
Go slow and enjoy the process
Downey California
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Yea, self-doubt is such a hindrance. But pushing through is what separates the men from boys. I just did an internship at a data center, working on a huge network as a NOC tech / systems admin; and boy, was it a daunting task. I got lucky and managed to get the role, but I hadn't even started to study CCNA prep material. More so, I just started my introduction NET classes at school. So you can only imagine how uncomfortable I felt being there every day, I forced myself to push through, because when you really want something you push your doubt to the side.
I want to end this by saying your video hit home because I too am currently trying to move from Helpdesk to a Network Position. But seeing how involved a big network can become, especially with Peering and BGP, not to mention the endless amount of information you have to sort through when you log on to a LEVEL 3 switch or Router, it was a very rude awakening, to say the least. I started to feel like I wasn't good enough and maybe helpdesk is all I'm qualified to do. I feel like this video is such a service to those of us that aren't "Wizards" like you said, to those of us that have to persevere. It lets us know that doubt is part of the journey, and to stay logical and positive through the process. Thank you, for posting this video, I truly mean that.
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Dude, seriously, thank you for this video x100, 000,000,000,000,000. I legit have all the fears you mentioned in this video and constantly compare myself to my boss who's a network engineer and another employee who has their ccna. It's hard being the only level 1 tech in the company because i can't relate to anyone else. I constantly see how they handle situations with ease and the types of situations they handle that are above my current level and do the dreadful comparing. I begin to question if I have what it takes to be a successful NE. However, with all that said, being the only level 1 tech and surrounded by people who are superior, while scary as hell hahs, actually helps push me to learn more and strive to be like them or at least to be a better version of myself intellectually. Any who, thanks again for this video. Easily my top favorite one I've watched on all of YT. You got my subscription.
Cheers! Also sick beard lol.
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Honestly, good 'commericial' but this seriously relies n 'trusting' a company with all your traffic, and alot of data as well thatisn't your system or the 'intended' target system.
The problem I see is this will cause alot of pressure on publically available tools and will put linux into a morally bound bad legal light.
This does ignore ssl connections, and how browsers will tend to lose their shit. This also will prompt 'public wifi' spots to start rampng up security & becoming more .. neutered as it where, making Lan/wan gaming impossible, and getting more on the 'monitoring train'.
Frankly I'm more likely to use my personal Phone Hotspot (wired or wireless)for this, because it's as good as a vpn, but you'll also have feed back from the phone when it loses connectivity, and really where all keping our phone near by when we do that.
these tools are pretty great, but the problem is that they are being used maliciously and there isn't any good faith being made with them.
also, some of these tactics will break some sites that on ssl.. or attempt to force it.
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thumbs down bc i cant finger it..maybe attitude towards it, but thumbs way up to teaching daughters pi..i cant relate to that. and what youre talking and trying to show is REAL. but dude come on, first starbucks wifi is free, so unless youve biult booster/repeaters (i have) to repeat the signal your only goal here is DESTRUCTION bc youre NOT HACKING starbucks wifi. But rather, as you said the people and employees, using the free wifi is NOT hacking. And starbucks uses google fiber now, good luck messing on theyre network, and i believe starbucks from my recon uses cisco systems, as the famous meraki products guys! those units...CONCLUSION do not even mess with it,use the free wifi as intended. I bet your friends at google have an IT dept monitoring the big clients fiber connections!! This is click bait commercial sponsoring tool at its best. DO NOT EVEN TRY IT. you cant get you neighbor or build your own lab, you dont need to be copying n paste jail bait code into your console.
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IMHO, you shouldn't learn wireless attacks first, you should learn normal non-hacker Linux and regular networking first, learn about the OSI model and apply that to what you know from linux and networking, then learn c (the second edition of k&r), then basic non-aslr binary exploitation (buffer overflows with an executable stack). Once you reach this point, you should have gained the ability to research how to do things on your own without having to rely on others for answers. This is the most valuable skill you will ever obtain, and I still to this day see IT guys out in the field that can't read a spec sheet to figure stuff out, and rely on second or third hand sources such as blogs and youtube videos.
From here, you should feel free to learn about whatever you want, if that's studying up on 802.11 wireless standards then go ahead and do that, but a solid foundation to build upon is absolutely essential if you are serious about, and want to succeed in cyber security, because it is one of the toughest, most stress filled and high knowledge barrier to entry fields there is when it comes to the tech industry.
I really wish someone told me something like this back when I was playing with backtrack and only using the GUI tools, I could have saved so much time with some direction, and knowing what to move onto next.
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I've been in I.T. for a long time. I'm getting ready for ICND1, then ICND2. I had a setback when I failed the "one and done."
Long story short, I'm trying to make up for missing a decade out of my career due to illness. I love networking, but I hate failing. It's a bitter pill, but it's also a part of life to fail first.
Anyway, don't waste your voucher! I don't know how much it costs, but you owe it to yourself and your growing family to make it count!
I wish I had the drive and direction I have now 20yrs ago. But wishing won't change a thing, but depress my outlook. I can't afford to waste any more time, and neither can you!
I'm turning 51yo on Monday, and I feel like I still have a lot more in my tank! My motto is simply this, ONWARD AND UPWARD!!!
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YES! If you aren't moving forward, you're moving backward. The question really isn't if, it's when. Take a break if you must, but take that test! Get the cert. Take two years to study, if necessary. But take it, pass, and get the cert.
To quote Bruce Lee, "If you put limits on everything you do, physical or anything else, it will spread into your work and into your life. There are no limits. There are only plateaus, and you must not stay there, you must move beyond them."
Do not stay on this plateau, rest if you must, but move beyond it!
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Great video thanks.
That you made your kids think you were going to get "pie", but then you got a "pi" was hilarious.
And making them taste coffee, which they spat out... that's me with a desire to learn Linux right there!
Much too funny.
Seriously, not that I like being serious, thanks for this video.
For my own part, I have older hardware (2007 and 2011 macbook laptops) and they are now showing their age, but only due to the software they run.
I have put Cloudready Chrome on the 2007 machine and Windows 7 on the 2011 machine, but with Chrome being a privacy killer (every activity must go through a Google login) and with W7 being out of support now, I want a reliable, secure, supported alternative that does not require new super fast hardware.
If I can try-before-you-buy (run Linux from a USB as I did with Chrome) before installing it as the only o/s, then I will give this a try.
Which flavour to go for?
Here's the part that (I have read this recently in YT comments) will be a sticking point.
Everyone in the Linux community agrees that Linux is what you should have.
No one agrees on which Linux you should have.
Anyway, thanks for the video.
I love that you involved the kids and that they got a kick out of helping daddy do a video.
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Job looking for, I decided to send for a testing period my cv explaining employers something easy. An IT Expert (either network or pc builder) is at 10 out of 10. From my working experience, I am at about 4-5 out of 10. Sitting on a chair, watching youtube videos or reading google search ebooks, pdfs, docs or other IT notes may help a novice begin, and sb as me (5/10) go just a little farther to a small better stage. The only way to progress from that point is through the experience of building PCs or networks, encountering problems and making mistakes, and figuring out how to solve them. There is no school out there that will teach sb to recognize when a BIOS or driver update might solve the problem exists... Or why the PC won't post anymore after you removed the GPU to test something on another PC, and returned it back in... Or what I may solve in a network trouble using ping or ipconfig... This is just a couple of examples, as there are numerous scenarios sb will get into while building PCs or networks, and, although doing google search will be helpful, there will also be times when hardware/network knowledge I gained in the process, will be necessary to recognize what is causing the problem. I guess sending this at main body of mail in my cv sending won't be helpful, but I know that, if an employer call me for an interview after reading this, will be truly responsible and serious.
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