First I'm sorry if this isn't appropriate for the hole Second I'm not Indian Third I'm not a codecel and I notice that's what rDrama seems to lean towards. I was thinking something like helpdesk or even physical repair shop before looking at cybersecurity or network infrastructure.
How do people feel about comptia certifications anyway? I've heard conflicting opinions including on this very site.
I don't have any IT work experience, just my wagie jobs. I've heard projects are a good substitute but what would be a good project for a non-codecel? Should I set up switches and routers or something? Also what kind of tests should I expect in the actual interview?
Also I've never messed with LinkedIn before. Do I have to go do that?
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Enjoy minimum wage forever
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I wouldn't stay there I just need an in
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I don't think that is really any kind of in, in fact it might lock you in as only being capable of doing stuff at that level for a long time
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There's no progression in physical repair. It doesn't go anywhere. It doesn't get you a job in any related industry or anything. You might eventually top out as a salaried retail manager, basically.
Anyone who does well paying board level repairs is an engineer.
If you know networking and can do physical work installing IP cams pays well, especially since knowing how to subnet puts you easily in the top percentile. Otherwise you need to become a codecel
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Well in terms of longterm non minimal wage work I was thinking about cybersecurity or networking. Course I don't know where to begin beyond the Tier 2 certs that make up the other points of the "comptia trio"
I've heard comptia networking plus a CCNA will actually help you out.
But I was wondering if I could get my foot in the door more immediately
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If you don't know code what on God's green earth are you going to be doing in cybersecurity?
Networking pays the bills. Lots of work in VOIP/Data/Door Entry/etc. A lot of the work is running cable and other menial shit and it's unlikely you'll be doing anything like setting up server farms, but it's real work and pays fairly well. See if anyone is hiring, likely you'll only need a car and a willingness to work on a ladder
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Networking is a good pathway listen to that other guy's advice. Don't get stuck at a mall repairing phones and helping boomers with their laptops unless it's a part time job for high school or college
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Ball soldering thoughbeit
Trans lives matter
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No one is paying good money for consumer product repair, unless you own the shop
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