Certs..What have you obtained this year or in the process of obtaining?

If any of u are in maryland and unemployed or underemployed, they will give you up to $5k to pay for courses/certifications.

Just call your local one stop center and ask about the WIA (workforce investment act) Training.

Props to DaAssWatcher for sharing that. I been putting people up on it.
 
I haven't found any books as pdf yet, but check out www.ine.com. The are currently offering their CCNA and CCNA Voice classes free. Just create an account and add the VoD classes to your cart. Again they are free. If you want to download then you have to pay the 99.00 bucks.
i'm dropping this in here also in case anybody missed it - free CCNA bootcamp vidoes

CCNA Associate - 640-802 Outline
http://www.ine.com/self-paced/ccna/bootcamps.htm



CCNA Voice Video Course - 640-461 ICOMM v8.0 Outline
http://www.ine.com/self-paced/ccna-voice/bootcamps.htm
 
The information about the WIA program is correct...but you have to go to the seminar that they have every week, sign up, wait for a counselor to hit you etc, etc. It took my over a year but I got it. Mr. Stephen Holmes is the guy to talk to. When I went he was the one doing the seminar also. I took the Net+ and CCNA course at the Computer Institute in Rockville for free and got 2 vouchers. You have to keep on the people at the one stop though but it is totally accurate. After you have gone through the course they are supposed to help you find a job but dont depend on that nigga. If you get your certs you wont have to worry about them finding you a job. Im already MCITP and I love networking and it fell into my career so I was eligible but its not as easy as they say. You have to be motivated.
 
The information about the WIA program is correct...but you have to go to the seminar that they have every week, sign up, wait for a counselor to hit you etc, etc. It took my over a year but I got it. Mr. Stephen Holmes is the guy to talk to. When I went he was the one doing the seminar also. I took the Net+ and CCNA course at the Computer Institute in Rockville for free and got 2 vouchers. You have to keep on the people at the one stop though but it is totally accurate. After you have gone through the course they are supposed to help you find a job but dont depend on that nigga. If you get your certs you wont have to worry about them finding you a job. Im already MCITP and I love networking and it fell into my career so I was eligible but its not as easy as they say. You have to be motivated.

I don't know about your area, but in Illinois, I can tell you that there are a few agencies that can assist in obtaining WIA grants, and I have seen where based on where you go for help, you might be able to get assistance a little bit faster with a little effort. I know someone that went to one place, and was asked to jump through a whole bunch of hoops for an extended period of time. Someone turned that person on to an agency that is geared towards helping Hispanic folks, and because this individual was on top of their game, found that the agency was willing to assist. A counselor at the spot told my friend that because there were so few Hispanic people coming into the office with their stuff together, she was not only able to help with the grant itself for the training, but also had extra funds for interview clothes and gas cards to travel to job interview. My friend flipped the MCITP and those clothes and gas cards into a nice little IT gig. :yes:
 
Thx bruh! CISSP and GWAPT. Just don't know which one I wanna scoop before 2014 comes in.


Sent from my Cerebrum.

I'm sure you probably already understand the difference, but I will say that you should give some thought to your immediate goals. IMO, the CISSP is frequently identified as one of those MUST HAVE certs that you will need to have to even be considered for InfoSec jobs. OTOH, if you are already focused on Pen Testing in particular, the GWAPT might demonstrate more specific knowledge in that area, and could be more useful. I find that most organizations (HR/Recruiters) aren't quite asking for the GIAC certs, but they are highly respected by InfoSec professionals. The cost is roughly the same, so another thing you might consider is that you have already been staring at pen testing related materials in prepping for the CEH; that might make it easier for you to knock out the GIAC cert first. I don' think of the CISSP as difficult, but depending on your knowledge in areas such as physical security and policy, you might have to spend a bit more time studying those areas.

Well, now that I have thoroughly NOT made the decision simpler for you :lol:, good luck and keep moving forward!

I still have to backtrack to redo my CCNA; I really don't want to be bothered with it, but I have to for work. I am working on my doctorate though, and really finding time for certification studies hard to come by.
 
I'm sure you probably already understand the difference, but I will say that you should give some thought to your immediate goals. IMO, the CISSP is frequently identified as one of those MUST HAVE certs that you will need to have to even be considered for InfoSec jobs. OTOH, if you are already focused on Pen Testing in particular, the GWAPT might demonstrate more specific knowledge in that area, and could be more useful. I find that most organizations (HR/Recruiters) aren't quite asking for the GIAC certs, but they are highly respected by InfoSec professionals. The cost is roughly the same, so another thing you might consider is that you have already been staring at pen testing related materials in prepping for the CEH; that might make it easier for you to knock out the GIAC cert first. I don' think of the CISSP as difficult, but depending on your knowledge in areas such as physical security and policy, you might have to spend a bit more time studying those areas.

Well, now that I have thoroughly NOT made the decision simpler for you :lol:, good luck and keep moving forward!

I still have to backtrack to redo my CCNA; I really don't want to be bothered with it, but I have to for work. I am working on my doctorate though, and really finding time for certification studies hard to come by.

Thx for the feedback fam. I was doing my masters before too so I put those off. You're right, I got the technical experience but my company outright paid for (after a lot of begging) the GWAPT, so I kinda wanted to show them a return. But the CISSP as you said is gold in them therrr hills! Although the CISSP I don't know a lot about some of the other domains like physical security as you pointed out.

No, you didn't make it easier. :lol:


Sent from my Cerebrum.
 
Thx for the feedback fam. I was doing my masters before too so I put those off. You're right, I got the technical experience but my company outright paid for (after a lot of begging) the GWAPT, so I kinda wanted to show them a return. But the CISSP as you said is gold in them therrr hills! Although the CISSP I don't know a lot about some of the other domains like physical security as you pointed out.

No, you didn't make it easier. :lol:


Sent from my Cerebrum.

:lol:

Well, it does sound like you have a great reason to go ahead and knock out the GWAPT. And, to be honest, going that route should make the CISSP a little easier. I did my Security+ a few months before the CISSP and it really did help a lot; the tech questions were really easy because I had been staring at that sort of stuff prepping for the Security+ exam.
 
:lol:

Well, it does sound like you have a great reason to go ahead and knock out the GWAPT. And, to be honest, going that route should make the CISSP a little easier. I did my Security+ a few months before the CISSP and it really did help a lot; the tech questions were really easy because I had been staring at that sort of stuff prepping for the Security+ exam.

:yes:


Sent from my Cerebrum.
 
What's up family, I just got laid off so I'm thinking of getting some certs. I have a B.S. in Business with a focus in management. I've been a manager at Aaron's for a year and in a non-supervisory role for nearly 4 years at Airtran. So I haven't really used my degree as of yet; I am looking to start my career now. I've been reading up on six sigma, and I want to know is it worth getting? Price difference from the green belt to black belt training is VERY noticeable.

Also I heard about the PMP cert and the FSA cert. I'm not sure what I want to do as far as a career (whether it be Actuary, Project Manager or something along those lines) but I want my resume to stand out so I'm looking for the best bang for buck.


THANKS in ADVANCE
 
will be starting my ccnp route this December. Got the CBT Nuggets and gonna order some books. :dance: Got my CCVP already. Cisco IT rarely makes you rich, but you will never be broke and jobless if you gain some experience.
 
This year I got:

Linux+ and the bonus LPIC-1 & Novell
Network+

Taking Security+ in 2 weeks.

After that RHCSA/RHCE.
 
My Little Nephew is about to graduate high school this year and wanted to go the certification route instead of the normal college route. Can anyone lay out the best certs to get first, second, third, etc..

Just don't want him wasting his time. He doesn't have anything specific he wants to major in. Any suggestions on that as well would be helpful.

Thanks in advance. :yes:
 
My Little Nephew is about to graduate high school this year and wanted to go the certification route instead of the normal college route. Can anyone lay out the best certs to get first, second, third, etc..

Just don't want him wasting his time. He doesn't have anything specific he wants to major in. Any suggestions on that as well would be helpful.

Thanks in advance. :yes:



Tell him to get 4 year degree! and do it while he is young.
Certs are nice but they come and go. A Degree is something they will never be able to take from you. I say this as a collage grad holding several high level certs.
Just my advice...
 
Tell him to get 4 year degree! and do it while he is young.
Certs are nice but they come and go. A Degree is something they will never be able to take from you. I say this as a collage grad holding several high level certs.
Just my advice...

i agree with this
 
Passed my CCNA Security 640-554 exam yesterday.

I have to thank my job experience for the easy pass. Worked on ASA, VPN tunnels, AAA and tons of ACLs.

Study materials: Cisco Press CCNA Security 640-554, Official Cert Guide by Keith Barker and CBT NUGGETS videos.
 
Tell him to get 4 year degree! and do it while he is young.
Certs are nice but they come and go. A Degree is something they will never be able to take from you. I say this as a collage grad holding several high level certs.
Just my advice...

I'm gonna have to agree with this..... I had the big head for a looooong time thinkin I didnt need no damn piece of paper! just give me the hands on approach and I wont let you down. Well... I had one company say ok an anything they threw at me I resolved. They were beyond impressed an told me I ran circles around the current IT guy however, since I didnt have a degree or any certs and he did, they couldnt hire me.

I got my A+, an several DCSE and because I procrastinated I got the stupid ass A+ce b.s. that you gotta renew every 3yrs or get a "higher" cert or you have to retake your cert. Get the degree they can't take that away from you or make you retest. Im thinkin bout it now bc my 3yrs are almost up an I gotta make moves.
 
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