konceptjones
New member
caddo man;8905055 said:konceptjones;8904985 said:_Goldie_;8904905 said:Lou_Cypher;8904866 said:Might get me a job in IT. Company would then pay for me to go get my certifications.
I'm studying for the CompTIA A+ right now, I'm mad I took this long to get into IT.
![]()
A+ is a waste of time unless you like being poor. If you want to get into IT and want to start out making more than $10-$13/hr, holler at this:
https://www.redhat.com/en/services/certification/rhcsa
Red Hat Certified Linux Administrator will get you in the door for far more money than an A+ ever will. Cop a used PC (minimum Pentium D or 64 bit Pentium 4 'cause RHEL7 only supports 64 bit machines right now), install CentOS 7 until you can afford a Red Hat 7 license (CentOS is just Red Hat enterprise linux with all of the trademarked logos removed), and get started studying.
let me expand on to that statement:
You can get running with Linux with VirtualBox on your current PC. Personally I recommend doing it on a separate machine, but if you're really strapped for cash or don't want to invest the $50-$75 it'll take to get a used desktop then download and install VirtualBox and the Extension pack for it.
Once installed, download the ISO for CentOS7 from one of these mirrors:http://isoredirect.centos.org/centos/7/isos/x86_64/
The file you want is the 4GB iso (CentOS-7-x86_64-DVD-1511.iso).
Follow this tutorial to get your first CentOS vm running:https://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/Virtualization/VirtualBox/CentOSguest
Once you have the OS built, log in and open a terminal (like a cmd box in Windows) and go through the basics found here:
http://manuals.bioinformatics.ucr.edu/home/linux-basics
Since most Linux distributions have adopted SystemD recently, it's good to go through the basics for that as well:https://www.digitalocean.com/commun...s-working-with-services-units-and-the-journal
get familiar with everything and just do the shit over and over for retention. Once you have this going jump right in and cop a RHCSA study guide and use it with your Linux install.
Last edited: