Hi All,
Something to mention about RHCE. As someone mentioned earlier 'it's nice to prepare for RHCE' but after getting certified I think the market is still not prepared for a RHCE. For eg. I completed RHCE on August 2004 but still waiting for a good option. There is no adv. in the newspaper Appointments asking for RHCE. So what's the good in going for so much effort.
-- Subhamoy
On 11/12/04 10:33 -0000, Subhamoy Mukherjee wrote:
Hi All,
Something to mention about RHCE. As someone mentioned earlier 'it's nice to prepare for RHCE' but after getting certified I think the market is still not prepared for a RHCE. For eg. I completed RHCE on August 2004 but still waiting for a good option. There is no adv. in the newspaper Appointments asking for RHCE. So what's the good in going for so much effort.
Please wrap your lines after 80 characters.
Certifications are useful in getting your foot in the door. Nothing more. If you actually learn things while studying for the certification, good for you. If you only study for the certification from dumps and by cramming answers, your certificate is worthless and actually devalues the certification. You could try approaching multiple places with your resume and see what they say.
I find that posting a lot of answers on mailing lists helps a lot. Usenet is another good place to post.
Note that most of the top posters here are not certified. They just have the experience gained from playing with the system and breaking it multiple times, and from RTFM and STFW ;)
Devdas Bhagat
--- Subhamoy Mukherjee subhamoym@rediffmail.com wrote:
As someone mentioned earlier 'it's nice to prepare for RHCE' but after getting certified I think the market is still not prepared for a RHCE. For eg. I completed RHCE on August 2004 but still waiting for a good option. There is no adv. in the newspaper Appointments asking for RHCE. So what's the good in going for so much effort.
I know that I may be good in linux. Others may know that I am good in linux. But can an employer know that I am good in linux?
An RHCE (being 100% practical and unpredictable) is my best way of telling the employer point blank that I have the required skills.
You people might have ages of experience with linux, but for a fresh BE graduate like me, certifications are the only way I can enter the market.
A reccent search for the term "RHCE" on monsterindia.com yielded 66 jobs. So The future is bright and motivation, strong.
Regards, Nadiem.
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