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Given that I am a fast learner..

What I know at the moment:

-simple html
-Linux (user but not programmer)
-general electronics/computer hardware (craft certificate)

2007-11-26 09:36:03 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Business & Finance Careers & Employment Technology

4 answers

ahm!!! maybe the best way for you is web designer,, if you already know some basic html then designing website will be easy for you!!!well if you want to be a web designer then you should be great in designing, photo editing, layouting,, theres alot of companys that are looking for a web designer and all you have to do is pass ur design!! micromedia dreamweaver will be a good tool for you and any photoshop software!!

2007-11-26 11:42:02 · answer #1 · answered by ghelo 2 · 0 0

Bullshit for Judy. You don't need a Degree to get into the IT field.. Most ads ask for a degree or experiences or both. Just follow the path of System Administrator. Get yourself a copy of Win 2003 and pass the certification MCSA. Then you will be able to get a job as help desk support level 2 then move on to System Administrator. Web Designer? Forget about it there are too many doing that.

2007-11-28 01:42:38 · answer #2 · answered by Roland 1 · 1 0

From my experience, a lot of companies want you to know active directory and ms exchange. those are, perhaps, two of the most essential things you'll need to land a job in IT. Why?? because those are the two most used in a business environment- emails and user accounts. Users are constantly forgetting passwords or needing help with their account/email. If you can get a hold of Microsoft Server 2003+MS Exchange and setup "your own" network and just play around with setting up accounts, i think you'll be ready. bear in mind these skills are geared more toward a help desk/network admin position, i don't know what direction of IT you were looking for (if you want to deal with hardware, do cisco's ccna/ccnp path)...but with these skills you're building the foundation, at least (and you build experience dealing with an actual client/server environment). and that's what most companies are looking for. Hey, I hope this helps! good luck.

2007-11-26 19:01:08 · answer #3 · answered by 4GigZ 2 · 1 0

Do you have a 4 year degree in some CS or IT field, or will you be getting it in 6 months? You'll need that for almost any professional position.

Good luck.

2007-11-26 20:00:07 · answer #4 · answered by Judy 7 · 0 1

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