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| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Career advice | supadid | What's on Your Mind? | 5 | 02-14-2007 08:44 AM |
| Career advice | etcman | Shell Programming and Scripting | 1 | 12-14-2006 09:46 PM |
| Want URGENT Advice:Career as UNIX Systme Administrator | saarth_desh | UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers | 5 | 07-24-2006 10:45 AM |
| Want Urgent career Advice | saarth_desh | Security | 0 | 07-22-2006 12:52 PM |
| Career | Gueso | UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers | 3 | 06-17-2006 05:27 AM |
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Advice on pursuing a career
Hello, I am currently a second year university student studying amongst other subjects Unix.
I am interested in pursuing Unix into a future career, specifically as a network administrator. I was wondering if you can provide information on how to pursue a career in Unix, i.e. what general paths would be worth while to pursue and any other advice you may wish to share. |
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Read, Read & Do
The best way to learn this Unix stuff is to do it. A lot of companies are looking for people with a few years of Unix/AIX/Linux experience. Learn as much as you can in school but the best way is to DO IT!!
Find some hardware and build out a few different systems. Keep in touch with the job board sites (monster, computerjobs) and see what they are looking for exactly. That should narrow down a scope for your study path. Good luck SeaCros |
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Yeah I have been learning a lot 'bout general Unix commands in lectures and I seem to be getting the hang of it, as you said it just takes practice (going over the commands again and again).
Is there a lot of competition in the business, or is it a pretty friendly area? Thanks for the help anyway. |
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Hello, I am currently studying a Unix module in my second year of university and I find it extreamly interesting.
I have learned about basic Unix commands and though I am aware that I still require practice I would like to know how to go about persuing a career in Unix? Any advice would be much appriciated. |
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Quote:
just my opnion |
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o yes... the problems have being straight out of school. i know because i am/was still there. i've found the hardest thing is not what you know but getting into that first interview. usually employers are looking for 4-6 years experience in unix sys admin admin type work. so how do you get there? i still have yet to figure that out. but what i can tell you is you have to be patient. most likely, you won't get that sys admin job right from the start (unless you know someone). i have been a sys admin for 2 years (3rd year out of college). my first year as a linux admin was nothign more then a glorified operator. my next year as a solaris admin was because i found the right company at the right time. they needed someone and they couldn't find a unix admin. i just happened to know a good deal about unix from my studies, reading and as everyone else has said... doing. unfortunately, the project got cut and i was well.. back in the market again. currently i am a hardware engineer. its not pure SA work but it teaches me a great deal about architecture and i get to expand on my OBP (forth) commands as well as other unix commands. i've had nightmares about HBAs from this job!
point being, you got to be patient about getting to those SA jobs. Or you have to really be smart in your unix knowledge. read as much as possible and always have servers at home to work on. keep up with technology and read the forums. its hard to find a good job right now. so again, be patient. my recommendations for you:
hope this helps somewhat. it really is a crazy time trying to find a job out of school. its not fun and can be really crappy at times. just stay positive. you'll make it happen. |
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A couple other remarks, just to maybe help you look in other directions, too.
If you're comfortable with scripting languages and databases, there's a whole web business world full of incompetent people to impress. I don't think it would be very gratifying in the long run, but this is one of the areas where you don't necessarily need to be strong on C / systems programming, which is often otherwise a baseline requirement for Unix-y jobs. Personally I would not touch PHP, but of course, that's where a lot of the buzz is right now. Ruby on Rails might be more interesting, but I'm not too familiar with that. And of course, there's a lot of "real" development shops doing real products on Linux or Unix. The ones I've been looking at tend to work on Internet appliances and stuff like that, where probably systems programming is an important skill, too; but in actual practice, from what I've heard, some of these shops mainly use Python in practice. (I guess Google, too?) |
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era points out another thing.
there are so many different types of programming languages its hard to just pick one. one shop will use php, another python. yet another will be all c and another will use all java. what one do you learn, god only knows. i think if you can program in c, you're probably a good candidate for a junior systems programmer position. i don't program so i never looked in that direction. i just do scripts. bash, ksh, csh... you all know the drill |
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I was required to interview some candidates in my former company (I was in the management post then but I have moved back to technical now). The most important criteria we looked for were:
1. Attitude of the candidate - we looked out for rudeness, selfishness, unable to work as part of a team, etc 2. Flexibility of the candidate - we preferred someone who was flexible in picking up new skills, able to communicate effectively and flexible in duration of working hours. Once we turned down a top student after we told her sometimes we needed to work till 8pm and her response was "So late?". In reality, sometimes we worked till past midnight 3. Ability in communication - must be able to listen and communicate effectively. Technical skill was actually at the lower priority but it's one of the important criteria. Honestly, I am not good in any specific programming language but as long as you're willing to learn, it's no big deal. I have to admit that I was a job hopper and I am not a specialist. I was in both UNIX and windows environment...moving from one language to another. Here are the list of languages/database/operating systems I have to pick up for over 10 years in my career: Dos/ Windows/UNIX/Linux SQL Windows/Centura Sybase - stored procedures and triggers Powerbuilder Oracle - stored procedures C C++ Natural Java C Shell now...Bourne shell I even moved from technical to management and back to technical. I also admit that sometimes I lost hope in my career, fed up and looked for opportunity to get out of IT industry. I don't love this industry...it's just my bread and butter. It's definitely better if you love it. |
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After many years as a system engineer in both enduser as well as field services I find that it's not very rewarding career being a unix engineer in either. I find that the best place if you want a career in is either application development or doing networks security.
As a network security engineer you have to learn new things all the time as new threats emerge but in reality once the corporation network is setup and running in production there is very little to do except every once in the while install some patch add some rules on the firewall, maybe every once in a while your network gets hit by a new worm and you are busy but most times I observe network engineers are quite free, and you most certainly won't see them arguing with application people over application performance problems as compare to the system administrator. Also a system person in an enduser environ, you do not bring much value as compares to a application developer. What you are doing is just maintaining the existing infrastructure, sure maybe you rollout a new system every now and then but that's what your mgt expects of you anyways? The application developer on the other hand brings in a lot of value in terms being able to understand the business needs and requirements and delivering those needs hence when it comes to getting bonuses better apraisals, pay increments the application guy usually gets more. You will find that in many environments the system and application are always fighting each other and very often the application guy will get the ear of the mgt to see things his/her way and thats the reality. In many environments I've been to i've observed that the applicaiton guy if he/she stays long will eventually become the Head of IT department. In vendor field services environment here you get to touch many systems but the learning curve is very steep and competition is very intense and the work is like preassure cooker, you're busy all the time, doing standby's, upgrades for paying customers implementating new projects sometimes even handling more than 5 projects on hand concurrently But not all engineers are built the same, some are very good in storages, some good at servers, some network oriented but very few are all rounders, you won't have any applicaition developers to fight with instead you are competiting your careers with each other and only the very best engineers get rewarded. One last thing, these days when corporations are outsourcing for cheaper services you will find that most often jobs that go are mostly system related , application usually not much affected. my 2 cents Last edited by sparcguy; 04-14-2008 at 07:11 PM. |
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