Microsoft Books and Certifications? 74
ozTravman asks: "I have been doing my Microsoft MCSE exams, so far I have completed 70-270 and 79-290 and I am about to start preparing for 70-291 'Implementing, Managing, and Maintaining a Microsoft Windows Server 2003 Network Infrastructure'. I currently work as a Systems Engineer and for the previous two tests I simply read the Microsoft Press books related to the test. However, I found those particular books to be quite useless and found that cramming for the test using Braindumps and practice exams the night before was far more effective and relevant to the test content. I did not even bother finishing the 70-290 book. So what books have other Slashdot readers have used to help them to prepare for these tests?"
Braindumps?!? (Score:1, Informative)
Wow.... (Score:4, Funny)
The purpose of taking the exam is to pass it. (Score:5, Insightful)
However, I found those particular books to be quite useless and found that cramming for the test using Braindumps and practice exams the night before was far more effective and relevant to the test content. I did not even bother finishing the 70-290 book.
The purpose of taking the exam is to pass it. Short of outright cheating, it doesn't matter how you pass it, only that you pass it.
It also doesn't matter whether you retain any of the knowledge afterwards: ALL THAT MATTERS IS THAT YOU RECEIVE THE SHEEPSKIN.*
I'm with you: Purchase the practice exams, and study backwards from there, i.e. investigate the theory behind only those questions you can't answer correctly a priori.
*If you are wondering, the purpose of the sheepskin is to help you get your foot in the door, or, if you're already inside, to help in justifying a raise in salary [and maybe a promotion to a more chi-chi sounding job title].
Re:The purpose of taking the exam is to pass it. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wow.... (Score:2)
it seems clear that the majority of
Windows users.
Re:Is this what you're asking? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Is this what you're asking? (Score:2)
No, no no... (Score:2)
Must Consult Someone Experienced
Re:Is this what you're asking? (Score:2, Insightful)
With all the training centers out there, if you pay them enough money, you'll pass the tests without ever working a day in the field.
Re:Is this what you're asking? (Score:2)
Organization has x number of MCSEs.
Company now is a "Solution Provider".
Microsoft sends work to your door. Large work.
Re:Is this what you're asking? (Score:2)
what value MSCE? (Score:2, Funny)
One company I worked with displayed them at the front desk...is this the best use of them?
There is still value in haveing them. (Score:3, Insightful)
MCSE Silliness (Score:2, Interesting)
I'll admit that once upon a time I thought the MCSE was a really cool thing.
My first clue came really early on, when back in the days of the NT 4.0 exams, I bought the official books for server administration. Then I was working on installing a server for a company and realised that these books didn't cover even half the stuff I came across.
Nowadays, I use Linux at home, and have Windows 2000 at work. My boss apparently has some MCSE training, and yet I seem to know how to handle basic Windows stuff far b
Re:MCSE Silliness (Score:2)
Later on, MCSE became tougher to deal with this, but the exam still aims for the largest market.
Now reading a book has never worked for me for computer certs. Just buy several cheap used computers, build a network and read braindumps. Works much better.
Re:MCSE Silliness (Score:2)
Certs don't make a good admin any better, but it should show you have the basics/intermediates covered which is enough to show you're not just bluffing.
God, that's depressing... (Score:2, Flamebait)
But, hey, they cost money
Re:God, that's depressing... (Score:1)
"The Matrix" lied?!? Gasp!
Here I am with a brain the size of a planet... (Score:1)
Actually Eye surgeons do cram, especially in pre-med. They're supposed to learn all about general anatomy and things that don't pertain to eye surgery. The "certification nonsense" is a problem in bureacracies everywhere. Oh well. Life, don't talk to me about life...
Re:God, that's depressing... (Score:1)
You've got it with the second one. Like my B.A. in Philosophy, my CCNA just got me into the "Second look" pile at my new job. Everything after that was actual knowledge and winning personality. Oh, and staggering humility.
Sad as that is,
Why would an Engineer get an MCSE? (Score:3, Insightful)
If you have a degree in Engineering, why are you pursuing an MCSE?
Seriously, as an Engineer I despise it when the term is abused. The AMA and ABA would never allow Microsoft et alia to churn out "Microsoft Certified Systems Doctors" or "C# Lawyers" so why does the IEEE/SAE/etc. sit on their hands when the word "Engineer" is abused?
Re:Why would an Engineer get an MCSE? (Score:2)
Wow, wouldn't THAT shake the foundations of computings... Don't forget, a healthy percentage of the "engineers" that created the entire industry are college dropouts. I suspect at least a few on the IEEE board are not technically qualified (acedemically, I am talking) to judge others...
Re:Why would an Engineer get an MCSE? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Why would an Engineer get an MCSE? (Score:1)
Re:Why would an Engineer get an MCSE? (Score:1)
I don't get paid nearly enough to be called an engineer, let alone warrant the implied liabilities of being labeled an engineer.
Re:Why would an Engineer get an MCSE? (Score:1)
An engineer by definition is someone who plans, builds or designs. Or, you can even go as far as saying that it is someone who operates an engine.
See your examples were just asinine. Doctor, has about 20 different definitions most relating to medicine
Re:Why would an Engineer get an MCSE? (Score:2)
Re:Why would an Engineer get an MCSE? (Score:1)
The counter to your argument re
Re:Why would an Engineer get an MCSE? (Score:2)
I have a pretty simple rule. If the place where I'm applying requires a CCNA or sim
Re:Why would an Engineer get an MCSE? (Score:1)
I remember when I first started out I had an ISP tech support job. I had finished my CCNA track (4 semesters of school, actual in class, on real routers schooling) and the best I could do was help desk. I tried to get a job
The actual value of certifications (Score:5, Interesting)
Yeah, certifications mean nothing to people who know anything about the craft of software engineering. That right there tells you why you'd bother getting them. I've just started with a consulting company, and they require their developers to get four certifications a year (and give a bonus for each one). It isn't because the certifications make the developers better, but because it makes them more marketable to potential clients who know neither jack nor shit about software. The only criteria those potential clients have to judge a consulting company on are 1) case studies of previous projects, and 2) arbitrary measures of skill like "90% of our developers hold MCSE certifications."
Forget for the moment that you know anything about software development. Forget that you give a damn about the differences between C#, Java, C, and Perl. Forget that you actually comprehend why an object-oriented programming paradigm benefits certain kinds of software projects. You're just a guy at some company who has a business or even liberal arts degree, who understands just enough about computers to expect email to be sent and received by Outlook, and who has been tasked with replacing/upgrading some mission-critical software system by the end of the fiscal year. How do you judge who should do the work? You know all the computers at work run Microsoft [sic]. You are told by these consulting companies who are bidding on your project that the M in MCSE stands for Microsoft. You figure that's got to be good, so the company with the most MCSE thud factor sounds the best, especially if their bid is near the lowest.
That's how business is conducted in the real world. This also applies to hiring developers internally. I refer you to Paul Graham's essay [paulgraham.com] on how it takes a good hacker to know a good hacker. For those unfortunate companies who do not have good hackers in their employ to judge the quality of potential developer employees/contractors, the certifications are the next best thing (however sad that may be).
I don't have any certifications at the moment, but I expect to have an MCSE within a year or so. I need to know the material so I can do my job, and that will come by actually doing it. I also need to know the material well enough to pass the tests, and for that I recommend hitting the library. I'll be damned if I'm going to buy books for this crap if I can possibly avoid it. My colleagues at this company recommend the Exam Cram series, but I found MCAD/MCSD Self-Paced Training books (from Microsoft Press) at my library, so that's what I'm using.
Re:The actual value of certifications (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm looking for a job right now and have my resume submitted to several different tech staffing places. Even though I'm not looking for any MS position, they *all* suggested getting an MSCE and RHCE or LPI. Right now I don't have the money to do RHCE, so I'm getting an LPI and MSCE to pad the resume.
Yes most certs are effectively useless and judged that way by the people who know. Rarely, however, do the people that know tech, bring you in for the first interview. 90% are HR people who only care about keywords and certs. "Oh we need somebody to do JNI, if this Java guy doesn't have it on his resume, then it's out-pile for him", even though, to me listing every obscure java related tech looks pretty rediculous.
At the suggestion of several people I wrote two different resumes according to who would be reading it. The dumbed-down "at-a-glace" resume for the HR people to get me in the door and the "real" version that doesn't make me look like a tool to the technical people.
In conclusion, don't knock trying to get an MSCE. Even though it sucks, it will help you. Even though its fairly worthless, it gets you in the door with people that don't know that. Furthermore, if you've gotten it without your employer paying for it it makes you look like you're doing everything you can to stay abreast of things in the indstry.
Re:The actual value of certifications (Score:2)
True, but totally offtopic. Leaving aside the fact that we're talking about IT jobs, not software engineering, the fact remains that certifications are essential to most resumes. You can talk all you want about how people should be evaluated according to their individual merits. (I'd certainly like to be, since my formal credentials suck.) Doesn't change the fact that degrees, certficiations and other
MS books seem written for ease of the writers. (Score:5, Insightful)
"... I simply read the Microsoft Press books related to the test. However, I found those particular books to be quite useless..."
Thank you for saying that. It's good to see the relative uselessness of Microsoft publications be discussed publically.
When I try to analyze why MS books and web sites are so useless, I come to the conclusion it is because they are written with the philosophy that most important issue is the ease of the writers, not the ease of the readers.
I suppose that Microsoft writers and editors think "Why try harder?" Anything they publish will be sold to people who don't have enough expertise in the subject of the book to realize that the book is very scattered and that it leaves out important information.
For example, consider the file encryption in Windows XP, called EFS, Encryping File System. EFS is very poorly documented. The encryption is tied to the user's password in a way that is apparently not documented. EFS depends on being part of a Windows 2003 Server domain in a way that is not clearly documented; if you are using Windows XP on a stand alone computer, there are situations in which you can lose your files forever, even if you have made all the backups suggested in the Microsoft books and web sites.
(Microsoft Technical Support agrees with what I just said, and provides no help or workarounds.)
The official Microsoft forums contain complaints of many people who have lost their files due to problems with EFS.
--
If your gov't chose killing as policy, expect others to choose the same.
Re:MS books seem written for ease of the writers. (Score:2)
Encryption is a statement that you want only "authorized people" to view the files, where you indicate authorization by possession of a password. If you forget how to tell the computer you're an authorized person, losing the files is a feature, not a bug. If that scenar
Windows XP makes another password, not backed up. (Score:2)
I was talking about people who did not lose their password or encryption certificates, obviously.
The problem is that Windows XP makes an additional password, one that is not backed up using any of the tools or documents provided. That automatically generated password is necessary, as well as the user account password, to decrypt the files.
If a computer is stand-alone, not part of a domain, then backing up everything, reformatting your hard drive, and reloading Windows XP will result in not having acce
Re:Windows XP makes another password, not backed u (Score:2)
Rather than making vague claims about what hidden, undocumented passwords are preventing you from using EFS (or recovering your data), why not start reading [microsoft.com]?
I really have very little sympathy for those who whine about how much EFS sucks. First of all, one must mak
I stand by what I said: EFS not for stand-alone c. (Score:2)
Your post amazes me. I said in my grandparent post that Microsoft Technical Support staff agrees with what I've written about EFS. Yet you assume that you know everything about the subject, and cannot possibly have made a mistake.
It is VERY easy to encrypt a folder: Right-click on a folder. Choose Properties/ Advanced/ Encrypt contents to secure data/.
It is very difficult to realize that all of Microsoft's technical documentation leaves out an important point. The documents about backup methods don't
Re:I stand by what I said: EFS not for stand-alone (Score:2)
I submit that not only are you incorrect, the Microsoft technical support agent you spoke to was either misinformed, or you misunderstood him.
Your statement:
"If a computer is stand-alone, not part of a domain, then backing up everything, reformatting your hard drive, and reloading
EFS & stand-alone computers? Can you make it w (Score:2)
Interesting. I've spent many hours trying to make it work, exactly as you say. I have plenty of test computers here, so that's no problem.
I would like you to try it yourself. If you can do the steps below successfully, then it would be great to work with you to understand how to do it.
My best understanding is that Windows XP generates an additional password that is not in the certificates, and ties EFS encrypted documents to that generated password and to the user's logon password, as well as the cert
Re:EFS & stand-alone computers? Can you make i (Score:2)
I used Virtual Server for this experiment. I started with one clean Windows XP SP2 image, with the Microsoft VM Additions (for improved performance in Virtual Server) and all current patches. To represent a true, imaged environment, I sysprep'd this machine and then created 2 child virtual machines from this common base. The sysprep process ensures that the machine's name and all security identifie
Should EFS be used in corporate SA environments? (Score:2)
For me, the entire issue is whether EFS can and should be used in a corporate environment with stand-alone computers.
I found the page about recovering from EFS problems: EFS Encrypted File System recovery [beginningt...elight.org].
This gives a map of how things are stored: "Unfinished 1024*768 image giving a brief overview" [beginningt...elight.org].
For $99 you can get a program to decrypt EFS files without knowing the password: Advanced EFS Data Recovery [elcomsoft.com]. I haven't tried it. Elcomsoft is a very well-known company.
Answer to your comment above:
Slashdot error? (Score:2)
Slashdot error? Please see comment: 13057950 [slashdot.org].
Re:Windows XP makes another password, not backed u (Score:2)
Junctions/hard~soft-links may not work (tend to be a PITA under Windows, so I haven't tried with TrueCrypt).
TrueCrypt: Have you had any problems? (Score:2)
Thanks for the information.
I've been worried about TrueCrypt, because the latest version fixed a lot of what look like serious bugs. I wonder how many other bugs are there.
Have you had any problems?
Re:TrueCrypt: Have you had any problems? (Score:2)
The one thing I want to check (but haven't) is if a volume encrypted with TrueCrypt can be decrypted with any other tool that has the same encryption scheme. (Does the file decrypt and does it appear as a logical drive image?)
If that is the case, it would be a handy way of
Bah. Useless. (Score:1)
I did my MCSA (never finished the MCSE - couldn't face those pointless design exams) and thought I knew loads. I have since discovered I knew *nothing*. In fact, I had to un-learn everything M$ had taught as I came to realise that the exams were
Another example of Microsoft's abusiveness. (Score:2)
Here's another example of Microsoft's lack of caring toward its customers: The SchTasks [microsoft.com] documentation.
Look at the second line: To view the command syntax, click the following command:
Notice that there are no links.
Note that the line: schtasks create should be bold, but isn't.
It should say that this command replaces AT.EXE, but it doesn't.
A list of all of Microsoft's abusiveness would require many, many books.
MCE and other certs (Score:5, Informative)
Recently, I did some work with some third party engineers on a few projects, and was surprised to find that they, like many companies, will not hire non-MCSAs these days. I did some additional research, and found this to be true - the certs are MUCH harder to get these days than they used to be, and the majority of the companies I called said that certs was a "make or break" when they reviewed resumes.
Here at Slashdot, you'll get a thousand idiots making fun of Microsoft, telling you to use Linux, and saying your MCSE isn't worth shit.
Let me dispell that rumor: THEY ARE WRONG. Don't listen to them, their knowledge is VERY outdated. Get your MCSE - it will mean a better job and higher pay, no matter what anyone here tells you.
feeding a troll (Score:3, Interesting)
This has been true for a long time, and has nothing to do with "outdated knowledge." By all means get certified if it gets your foot in the door. But if you want to enjoy using computers, use un*x when you can.
Anyone who doesn't know this already should not be entering the field at all, not debating what kind of certifications to get.
Re:MCE and other certs (Score:2, Interesting)
I tell you what's more important: the actual experience.
If I see a resume that says:
EXPERIENCE
2003-2005 Some Medium Company,
Software engineer.
Explored, Designed, and Implemented system with Oracle and MSSQL back-ends, data import from csv, excel, access, and xml from EDI and FTP drop-offs, data processing with informatica and dts, tomcat with hibernate an
Re:MCE and other certs (Score:1)
Exam Cram Books or Why MCSE is a good thing. (Score:4, Insightful)
Real Advice (Score:1)
The MS Press books are ok but they don't spoon-feed you. Sybex books are also good. You'll get the most out of them is you spend time applying what you learned in the lab.
Avoid Braindumps. You
Real BAD Advice (Score:3, Insightful)
In an ideal world, yes. But if the primary goal of obtaining a cert is to get a better position with a company that for whatever reason requires MS certs, than I see no problem at all with braindumps and cramming.
Everyone around here says that MS certs are worthless as indicators of practical knowledge, so why mess around with anything that is not designed to help you pass in the quickest possible way? Of course knowing what you are d
Real BAD... Ethics (Score:1)
Let me know how they react.
If there is one thing that devalues any certification, it is cheating.
MCSE, What it really means. (Score:2, Funny)
When taking on clients, if they ask me for MCSE, I file them into...you guessed it.../dev/null.
Re:MCSE, What it really means. (Score:1)
Read the whole resume somtime, you might be passing on some great talent!
Re:MCSE, What it really means. (Score:2)
+++
http://www.drudgereport.com for the truth.
Re:MCSE, What it really means. (Score:1)
Just as bad as MCSE.
>/dev/null
Devry? (Score:2)
+++
My new Home [stevenpatz.net]
Real meaning of MCSE (Score:1)
Mine-sweeper Consultant, Solitaire Expert
-or-
Must Consult Someone Experienced
Re:Real meaning of MCSE (Score:1)
That has to get mod up.
You're basically screwed (Score:2)
Sybex (Score:2)
The Sybex study guides I have used have all been excellent.
*Not to mention the whole "Save the world by using NetWare" BS in the Novell guides. I could not finish the first one