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Old Sep 19, 2005 | 08:23 PM
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Networking People?

I was wondering what College/Schools you went to, to learn this stuff. I'm tired of programming in C++ and i'ts jsut to hard and I think Networking would be more fun/easier

TIA
Old Sep 19, 2005 | 08:29 PM
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I graduated with a degree in CS+Econ from Bowdoin College. All my networking/sysadmin knowledge came from working on campus for the NOC. After that, it was just different jobs.
Old Sep 19, 2005 | 10:12 PM
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stick with coding...

netowrking and sysadmin is boring stuff.
Old Sep 19, 2005 | 10:23 PM
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Many of the coding jobs are going overseas...really disappointing in the last couple of years.

I have a degree in EE - I think it is much harder than CS, which used to be my major.
Old Sep 19, 2005 | 10:38 PM
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Originally Posted by ldivinag
stick with coding...

netowrking and sysadmin is boring stuff.
No way man . Writing code in front of a terminal all day is boring. Fixing a failed RAID array when you are losing money @ $1000/minute is exciting ****.
Old Sep 19, 2005 | 10:55 PM
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Originally Posted by mcowger
No way man . Writing code in front of a terminal all day is boring. Fixing a failed RAID array when you are losing money @ $1000/minute is exciting ****.
Werd.


I'm an MIS major at SJSU. I'm taking my intro to Networking right now, and I love it. If things go well this semester in the class I'll probably take the advanced class for my elective.

-Gagan
Old Sep 19, 2005 | 11:51 PM
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^^ I should have majored in MIS or CIS...I heard it's so much easier..
Old Sep 20, 2005 | 03:10 PM
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Originally Posted by gqchynaboy
I was wondering what College/Schools you went to, to learn this stuff. I'm tired of programming in C++ and i'ts jsut to hard and I think Networking would be more fun/easier

TIA

B.S.: Telecommunications, Multimedia, and Applied Computing at Cal State Monterey Bay

During my networking classes I concurrently knocked out a CCNA (Cisco Certified Networking Associate).

Rather than look for a school, you might want to just take a look at this ceritification program.

CCNA is a good solid cert that can break you into the industry.
Old Sep 20, 2005 | 04:55 PM
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For networking, you don't need classes. You need a CCNA. Then you can branch out to a CISSP, CCDA, CCNP, CCIE, etc. The CCNA is a no joke certification. It's hard to get, but if you get it, you KNOW networking (at least layer 1-4 networking). Yes, it's a vendor specific cert, and yes, it teaches you how to bang on a Cisco product and learn the Cisco IOS, but it also teaches you the fundamentals of layer 1 to 4 networking, and that's REALLY where you get value. Get your CCNA. It's well worth it.
Old Sep 20, 2005 | 04:57 PM
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I'll have to disagree on the CCNA...it was super easy. Although the later certs are the hard ones.
Old Sep 20, 2005 | 05:42 PM
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^^ Thanks I might just do that. I see they offer CCNA classes at SRJC, anyone take it there?
Old Sep 20, 2005 | 05:46 PM
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i like networking with the opposite sex
Old Sep 20, 2005 | 05:54 PM
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From: My lugnuts require more torque then your Honda makes
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^^ I do to, but I don't think I need to go to school for that =]

Well I see that it will take 1 year to complete the classes for CISCO Networking 1-4 at SRJC =X

Last edited by gqchynaboy; Sep 20, 2005 at 06:06 PM.
Old Sep 20, 2005 | 06:24 PM
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Grab a good CCNA Book, maybe a book for Network+ and get studying.

4-5 months and I think you'll be on your way.

Having a programming background is a good solid foundation to start with.

It'll help when you get to the sections on subnet masks.

Subnets = teh suxor
Old Sep 20, 2005 | 06:47 PM
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From: My lugnuts require more torque then your Honda makes
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I've read that CCNA Cert is meaning less unless you have some experience. Jobs i see like on craigslist you need like 3+ years experience. Anyone know any any internships?



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