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- Path: sparky!uunet!destroyer!gatech!cae!cae!not-for-mail
- From: vincent@cad.gatech.edu (Vincent Fox)
- Newsgroups: comp.unix.admin
- Subject: Re: Breaking in to Unix admin. Need Suggestions!!
- Date: 13 Nov 1992 12:04:11 -0500
- Organization: Georgia Institute of Technology, CAE/CAD Lab
- Lines: 43
- Distribution: na
- Message-ID: <1e0n6bINN5sp@cae.cad.gatech.edu>
- References: <74707@hydra.gatech.EDU>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: cae.cad.gatech.edu
-
- In <74707@hydra.gatech.EDU> rm72@prism.gatech.EDU (Bruce McCullough) writes:
- >How about some suggestions for get some training for Unix Admin. I've
- >got a couple of books on the subject but need some real experience.
-
- Books are good for reference works, but there is no substitute for
- experience. Kind of a Catch-22 like most things. Small new shops though
- will hire unexperienced admins, and this will be your best bet.
- They usually are just getting into Unix, so all you have to do is
- stay a day ahead of them and you'll seem like a genius.
-
- >How do I break in to this area? General speaking.
-
- I think "how do I break out" is a better question. It loses any real
- thrill after the third time you're called in at night/holiday/weekend
- to fix a crashed file-server.
-
- >Also as a soon to be graduate?
- >Are there any software courses out there that might help?
-
- I'm extremely skeptical of them. Better to apprentice under someone
- who knows what they're doing if you can. Most of the "real" stuff
- isn't on paper, it's passed around amongst the gurus the old-fashioned
- way. All the really useful stuff is so obscure it hardly would be
- worth publishing it.
-
- >Any other suggestions? Maybe like the path you have taken to get there.
-
- I came in as just a moderate user. Since the folks who hired me
- didn't know Unix either it was easy to excuse my early screwups.
- Their relative lack of knowledge also makes it easy to cover-up your
- mistakes. So when you rm -rf in the wrong directory and wipe out all
- user files, you can say "bad sector munged the i-node tables" and
- they'll believe it.
-
- >Thanks for any help! Any other worthy comments you mave have would also
- >be nice.
-
- There is no substitute for being thrown into to the deep end of the pool.
- Sharpens your wits, and motivates you to really and truly understand
- what's happening at the low levels of things. New and unusual problems
- every day, so ability to organize a problem and good diagnostic
- skills are the most important things.
-
-