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Glad to see you are interested in HP-UX!
![]() http://www.hp.com/education/certific...structure.html That link will take you to the HP-UX certification homepage, there are two paths, which are cummulative rather than dichotomous - in the sense that you will want to complete one (HP-UX certified IT professional) and then move onto the other (HP-UC advanced IT professional). For most doing the first track is sufficient - it will take you through becoming a very competent HP-UX network and system administrator and for most employees that is more than enough. The advanced track will go into greater detail relating to HP-UX networking, operations, high availability and security. You might want to focus on just one or two aspects of this track, depending on where you interest lies, such as security (which is big nowadays) or high availability which has always been important in corporate (as well as other) environments. http://www.hp.com/education/edu-cent...ters.html#ushp Living as you do, in Portland, that link will show you the local HP education centres in the US where you can pursue a track in HP-UX certification. Sorry there don't seem to be centres in Oregon - but it's a good excuse to travel! Hope this helps. Regards. |
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Hi aliissa
I don't live in Portland In fact I don't even live on your side of the pond, I'm in the UK - I was just aware that Portland is in Oregon. The LUG in Portland: http://www.pdxlinux.org/ I am sure they will be willing to help beginners to Linux, these Linux people tend to be friendly fellows - take a look at Neo and PxT ![]() I'm not too familar with the college that you mentioned, but I am sure it will give you a very good beginners introduction to UNIX if that is what the couse is designed to do. Just as a general pointer I would ascertain if they have hands on learning, i.e. if they let you mess around with UNIX machines while you are learning, and it is not just a solely theoretical course. In my experience there is NOTHING more beneficial than learning something in theory and then trying to apply it in practice on a UNIX box, and in a test/learning environment it is even better since you're not worried about messing things up. In fact you often obtain a wider skills base when things go wrong since it then becomes a troubleshooting as well as a learning exercise. You might also want to look into getting yourself a UNIX shell account, your ISP may give you one for a nominal charge, or you can search the internet for shell accounts. This will be useful to you in your early days of learning UNIX, as you get more advanced you're going to want your own machine, where you can have super user access. If you need any more help please don't hesitate to ask! Regards. |
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Here's some info.
I too am looking into a UNIX or Linux certification.
If you're going to go with a Linux certification I'd choose either the Sair Linux or the LPI. The reason for this is that both are vendor nuetral rather than being specific to one distribution. So you'll learn to administrate any distribution. RHCE is specific to the RedHat distribution and won't help you out when you have to load software on a Debian box. Debian uses there own package manager rather than Redhats rpm system. I'm going to do the Sair probably first. Then maybe the Sun cert. like Neo was talking about. Sair course is about $1700.00 with New Horizons. Sun Certification is much more expensive. $5000.00 to get SCSA certified. I don't know about the prices for HP-UX or LPI yet. Hope that helps. |
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check out www.brainbuzz.com if you havn't already.
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Unix OR Linux Cert?
Hi,
I am an NT MCSE who has decided to abandon the MSCE Win2K path and take the UNIX/Linux Path. But since I am very new to that field, I am not sure exactly what Certification I should get that would cover the biggest area of that field as possible. Not to mention if I should got with Linux or UNIX? Please keep in mind that I am trying to take Network and System Administration path! 1- Linux, there seems to be one of the following three: A) CompTIA Linux+ (My favorate as I am already A+ and Network+, but it seems as it is still in the testing stages) B) Sair Linux and GNU (Seems to be stright forward) C) RedHat "RHCE" D) LPI "Linux Professional Institute" 2- For Unix, I am not sure I have covered all resources and that is another reason why I am posting here. But it seems to be few Vendor related UNIX distribution such as Sun Solaris and others. Again, the question is, if I choose Unix, which would be the best that is most General and most wanted in the market. Thanks for your help |
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