Re: RHCE and other certs?

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I recommend you start first with RHCT then RHCE, all of them based on Labs
not like LPI or Linux+.

On 4/17/07, Terry Zink <tzink@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Hi Evan,

Certification's weight seems to be based on the person hiring.  I know
several past companies that I worked at cared very little for
certifications.  In fact, I myself find little weight to certs, as I know
several people who have higher ranking certs than I do, but in reality know
very little.

I cannot speak for the LPI cert, but I can for the RHCE.  While in my
opinion it skipped over a great many things that a true engineer should
know, it was in depth in many other areas.  My opinion is go for it if you
can, but don't think yourself a star if you get it.  Real experience (be it
personal or work) is worth far more in my opinion.

That said, I can say my company rewarded me for my efforts in obtaining my
certification as do many others.  It can mean a large chunk of salary
difference.

Certs do however help while job hunting.  Having your RHCE will usually
mean you are picked over someone who does not have an RHCE, unless he has
far more experience, or blows you out of the water in the phone interview.

Again, it all depends on the mindset of the company and more importantly
the person looking over the resumes.

Either way, I'm glad I have it and plan to eventually obtain my RHCA as
well.  The RHCA covers many more areas that I believe the RHCE should have
included.



---

Terry Zink
RHCE
Logicworks
________________________________________
From: redhat-list-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx [redhat-list-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of Evan Klitzke [evan-lists@xxxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Tuesday, April 17, 2007 1:03 AM
To: redhat-list@xxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RHCE and other certs?

Hi everyone,

I am a third year undergraduate student (at UC Berkeley) right now, and
have been using Linux for a couple of years now. Right now I am thinking
about doing sysadmin work after I graduate.

Last summer I was able to get a full time internship at a startup doing
system administration work. It went really well, and I have been
continuing to work there part time this past school year. During that
time I did a lot of work, including assisting in the migration of our
server/development environment when the startup was acquired by a much
larger company. Based on my experiences at this job, I am very confident
in my technical skills. I've worked with several other Linux sysadmins,
many of whom who have been doing Unix/Linux system administration for
most of their careers. While I can't claim to match them in experience
or knowledge, I feel that a few specific area aside (e.g. database
things), I have a very strong level of technical knowledge. My
experiences participating in this and several other mailing lists
confirms this.

I've looked at a number of job websites, and most system administrator
positions require several years of experience. The introductory
positions (i.e. the ones that require essentially no experience) are
hard to find and are generally not very compelling. I've been thinking
about getting an LPI or RHCE certification before graduating in the
hopes that when the time comes I'll be able to get a more interesting
job. Based on the LPI material I've looked at (including the O'Reilly
"In A Nutshell" LPI book), I think that I could get a level 2
certification fairly easy. The RHCE material looks a bit more advanced,
but I still know a good deal of it, and if I studied I could get one
before I graduate (next year). That being said, both exams are fairly
costly for a student: LPI-2 would be four $150 exams, and the RHCE exam
is $750. Additionally, I'd have to take the RHCE exam again anyway
(albeit at a lower price) in a few years anyway to keep the
certification.

My question is: how valuable do you think that these kinds of
certifications are? I feel like getting them might prove to employers
that I might not be as green as I appear, when it becomes time to go job
hunting. On the other hand, there doesn't seem to be a lot of demand for
these certifications, and my impression is that very few people actually
get them. Are these certifications important, or are they just skipped
over on resumes?

Thanks a lot!
Evan Klitzke

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