On Friday 14 February 2003 13:31, deFreese, Barry wrote: > >-----Original Message----- > > From: Mike M [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > > >Sent: Friday, February 14, 2003 8:16 AM > >To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > >Subject: Certification > > > > > >Certification is for PHBs only. Right? Is there any evidence other than > >marketing blather that certification is a worthwhile endeavor? > >-- > >Mike M. > > Certification is a double-edged sword. I don't know about the Linux world > yet but in the old Novell days and in the M$ world, many organizations will > not hire someone who is not "certified", regardless of their true > experience level or talent. > > Now, the flip side of the problem is that you have VERY talented people who > do not need to be certified getting passed over for jobs and freshly > certified (certifiable? :-) ) morons who couldn't set up a server to save > their lives. > > I think the stigma is changing some after many companies have been burned > hiring the "certified" morons.
Heh-heh. Glad to hear it. > However, getting certified is never > necessarily a bad thing. It can be a way to keep up with technology and it > also shows employers that you are willing to continue learning/growing. > > Just my worthless $.02 > > BTW, is there a Debian certification?? ;-) Just kidding. I would be more inclined toward certification it were not such a pure profit opportunity for the administrator; US$750 for a RHCE; 4 digit numbers for MS/Oracle/Cisco/Krispy Kreme certs. To my way of thinking being certified is like being "award winning". The award winning entity never mentions what award it is that they won and where and when they got it and why. Or how much they paid for it. I saw a post on the French debian user list where someone suggested using the number of your Debian user list posts as your certification rating. Clever. (Google's translate function is way cool. ) -- Mike M. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]