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Garrand posted:I guess I'm just live posting my experiences now. Anyway The problem with this is that the question is not the same as what the response suggests. The question asks 'What is the highest decimal value for a single byte?' Well, the highest 'value' is 255. Then the response says that there are '256 possible values', which is a totally different point. And those values reach from 0 to 255, still making 255 the correct answer.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 07:46 |
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# ? Apr 19, 2024 13:34 |
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Ugh my dumb A+ is about to expire in 4 months and I feel obligated to keep it for some stupid reason (probably because I spent $700 on it). Guessing my best bet is to just take Network+? That is just one exam, right? Other option is Security+. Not sure which is better to have a on a resume today, or if I should maybe even consider getting both. I've been slacking on my certificates.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 12:09 |
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Peanut Butler posted:Apologies if this has been retread over and over through years of this thread (or even in the last few pages, haha), but I'm 35, haven't worked in IT since 2002 (as a bottom-rung housecall support tech), and I'm getting sick of the no-future retail/service work I put myself through during the day while doing hobby-level and odd-job computer touching/repair/refurbs at night The key thing, in my experience, is that your certs precede you. If you can defend your certs during interview (like you know your poo poo) then nobody's going to bat an eye that your work record doesn't quite line up. If you've been doing any computer-related stuff in your previous jobs it's very easy to write the description in a way that highlights those things. It's very easy to talk about those things in an interview in a way that lines up with whatever you're applying for. Even if you haven't it's really enough that you can explain what certs you've gotten and why you've gotten them. In fact, not being a test-dumped cert robot and having experience in other areas is probably a big plus because it shows you can communicate with humans. You think these things are a liability, but they're really not. Go get the certs, learn the material, and you'll probably be just fine. You think you're new to the industry because you've been away for a while, but there's no reason to view it like that. You already know the basic stuff. If you can add some specialized skills on top of that(and can describe them well during interviews) then you're in a pretty good position. ErIog fucked around with this message at 12:57 on Feb 8, 2018 |
# ? Feb 8, 2018 12:50 |
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Alpha Mayo posted:Ugh my dumb A+ is about to expire in 4 months and I feel obligated to keep it for some stupid reason (probably because I spent $700 on it). Guessing my best bet is to just take Network+? That is just one exam, right? I passed the Security+ yesterday and was EXTREMELY DISAPPOINTED in the total lack of any mention of War Driving, War Chalking, Vishing, Smishing, War Ballooning, or any other stupid terminology. The best I got was bluesnarfing. I passed the Network+ last month and that one required much more application as opposed to rote memorization - subnetting, switch configuration, all that was on it. Looking at jobs the past couple months I've seen a lot more requiring or requesting Security+ than Network+, probably because any interface with the DoD requires it.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 15:16 |
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Oyster posted:I passed the Security+ yesterday and was EXTREMELY DISAPPOINTED in the total lack of any mention of War Driving, War Chalking, Vishing, Smishing, War Ballooning, or any other stupid terminology. The best I got was bluesnarfing. I passed the Network+ last month and that one required much more application as opposed to rote memorization - subnetting, switch configuration, all that was on it. The whole industry is moving towards a security focus. I've seen so many network engineer roles that are now classified as "network security engineer". Companies want their network guys to config the firewalls too, and everybody is pouring money into cybersecurity, so they want network guys to have security certs over network certs. I tell recruiters I have a CCNA Route and Switch and they don't care, i tell them I have CCNA Security and Security+ and they want to throw me at all sorts of roles.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 16:08 |
Defenestrategy posted:Whats a cysa+ supposed to be about? In addition to the Cysa+ can you also get the Blyat+?
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 16:36 |
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Oyster posted:I passed the Security+ yesterday and was EXTREMELY DISAPPOINTED in the total lack of any mention of War Driving, War Chalking, Vishing, Smishing, War Ballooning, or any other stupid terminology. The best I got was bluesnarfing. I passed the Network+ last month and that one required much more application as opposed to rote memorization - subnetting, switch configuration, all that was on it. Bluesnarfing. Edit: I'm honestly glad to hear the Sec+ got better, maybe mine will be more valuable now.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 18:44 |
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I've gotten three certs in the past three months - A+, Network+, and Security+. I've been waffling between Server+ next or the ICND1. First I was leaning towards the ICND1, but looking at CompTIA's security offerings and stackable tracks it really seems like it might actually be worth something. My experience thus far has been that no one cares about the A+, too many people care about the Security+, and I learned the most with the Network+. Which one seems to have more value? I'm leaning towards CCENT followed by CCNA, but if the CySA+/CASP track is worth as much as it sounds that may change.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 23:17 |
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Last I checked(and admittedly, it has been a few years), Server+ was garbage even for a CompTIA certification. It is basically worthless.(I also have A+/Net+/Sec+) However, ICND1 is 1/2 to a CCNA and will teach you more about networking then you ever imagined.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 23:27 |
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Unless it's required for the job (Sec+) any toss up between a Cisco cert and a CompTIA cert always comes up Cisco. I think the ICND1 is even cheaper than a CompTIA.
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# ? Feb 8, 2018 23:44 |
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How difficult are the aws exams? I've been using aws on a large Enterprise for a while but you never know how that will translate
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# ? Feb 10, 2018 13:04 |
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vyst posted:How difficult are the aws exams? I've been using aws on a large Enterprise for a while but you never know how that will translate Preface: I got my Certified Solutions Architect: Associate cert in late Nov. 2017 and my Certified SysOps Administrator: Associate cert New Year's Eve Day, 2017. Depends on your definition of "a while." I've been using it for five years, sometimes more stringently than at other positions, and I found the first cert mentioned to be quite easy. It goes over pretty much everything at a fairly high level. EC2 instances, EBS vs. ephemeral storage (Durrrrr), RDS and the types of database engines you can use, VPCs, security groups, Network ACLs, Cloudwatch, ELBs, etc. The second one is definitely the hardest of the three Associate-level certs. If you can't make custom VPCs, explain ideal auto-scaling setups based on different scenarios (cost cutting, failover availability across multiple AZs, etc.), and how to auto-age-out backups from S3 to Glacier while drunk and blindfolded, you won't pass. But it's my understanding that there's about 500 questions and they are randomly assigned out of the 55 or however many it was so your mileage may vary. They also updated the tests literally a day or two after I took my SysOps exam, which were in beta at the time but results would not be known for weeks or months instead of instantly, so I opted not to take those. I setup a new AWS account, bought some dirt-cheap video tutorials from ACloudGuru via Udemy, followed them while taking fastidious notes and going through what was being demonstrated, not merely watching, and that did the trick. Now I'm doing the same for an RHCSA cert. Once I'm done with that, I might get the Developer Associate, just to have all three, or maybe I'll move on to the Professional-level versions of the two I mentioned, which I understand to be much harder. If you have any other questions, ask away. I also have an 82-page MS Word document of my notes for the Solutions Architect video training that some people might be interested in...
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# ? Feb 10, 2018 15:46 |
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Sounds like my employer has caught the same bug everyone else's has and they are keen on me getting the Security+, which is fine by me since they are paying and my A+/Net+ are expiring soon. I feel the same senseless attachment to them as well. I used the All-in-one books for A+/Net+ years ago and felt they were sufficient for both, is the All-in-one still good enough for the Sec+, or is there some new hotness? For people who have taken it recently, how does the difficulty compare with the Net+?
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# ? Feb 11, 2018 02:25 |
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Diva Cupcake posted:In case you're interested in what looks to be another grab for CompTIA dollars, the new PenTest+ beta is now available. Although I suppose cheaper marginally less scammy alternatives to CEH should be welcomed. Huh, interesting... Just yesterday I found out that I passed the Cloud+ Beta cert I took back in October (), even though the test itself was completely inane and covered absolutely zero of the study material from the official Comptia study book. Fifty bucks is tempting, but I don't think I would do a beta test again, way too much stupid bullshit, I learned basically nothing, and I guarantee the cert is pretty worthless. Catatron Prime fucked around with this message at 15:15 on Feb 11, 2018 |
# ? Feb 11, 2018 15:11 |
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Adjectivist Philosophy posted:Sounds like my employer has caught the same bug everyone else's has and they are keen on me getting the Security+, which is fine by me since they are paying and my A+/Net+ are expiring soon. I feel the same senseless attachment to them as well. I can't speak for the all-in-one since I didn't even know of it's existence, but I think the Sec+ was mostly inane memorization poo poo. The Net+ had much more application on it, and I learned the most from it. Sec+ was mostly memorizing what is administrative/technical/physical, what recommended specs are, what the incident recovery process is, etc. My practice tests covered smishing/vishing/war chalking/all that, but the closest my actual test came to that was bluesnarfing, which was also covered in my Net+ material. Keep in mind that the 04 will be retired in July, and that's what I took last week, so things might be changing.
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# ? Feb 12, 2018 03:29 |
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Adjectivist Philosophy posted:Sounds like my employer has caught the same bug everyone else's has and they are keen on me getting the Security+, which is fine by me since they are paying and my A+/Net+ are expiring soon. I feel the same senseless attachment to them as well. I'm working on Sec+ starting tomorrow and everyone says the Gibson book is the one to get. Kindle version is only $10 https://www.amazon.com/CompTIA-Security-Certified-Ahead-SY0-401/dp/1939136024/ He has additional training material on his site with practice exams and simulations as well. http://getcertifiedgetahead.com/index.php/security-sy0-401/ You have until July to test for 401, otherwise you'll need to study for 501.
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# ? Feb 12, 2018 06:47 |
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After a few weather cancellations, I finally was able to take the CCNA exam (again). Passed it, too! The Boson practice tests were a big help, as was the 31 Days Before Your CCNA Exam book, so thanks again for the recommendations. Now I just need to get out of helpdesk...
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 17:43 |
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CHEF!!! posted:If you have any other questions, ask away. I also have an 82-page MS Word document of my notes for the Solutions Architect video training that some people might be interested in... Interested. I'm working through this course right now on Udemy. The 15-20 minute video segments are a struggle with my attention span. I do a lot better on courses with 4-8 minute videos.
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# ? Feb 13, 2018 22:45 |
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CHEF!!! posted:
I would happily take that word document if you want to send it my way... jtwortley at gmail dot com
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# ? Feb 14, 2018 19:01 |
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At 82 pages you might as well watch the videos yourself
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# ? Feb 14, 2018 19:02 |
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I passed the AWS certified solutions architect associate exam a while back using the official study guide and practice tests from A Cloud Academy (I did them all during the free 7 days). It took about two months to prep and I knew basically nothing about AWS prior to taking it. The book does a pretty good job of introducing most concepts you’d need to know and running you through labs on them. Supplement with white papers on things that don’t quite stick and you’ll be fine. The exam is very focused on core services so while there are questions on things like opsworks and elastic beanstalk and so on, if you know EC2, S3, EBS, cloudwatch and VPC pretty well you should be able to pass. YOLOsubmarine fucked around with this message at 19:36 on Feb 14, 2018 |
# ? Feb 14, 2018 19:27 |
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not sure if this is the right place for this but I'm trying to get my company to pony up for SANS 401 and they are open to the idea but are busting my balls about the price of it. Mostly, they want to know if there's a class of similar quality that is available for cheaper. Do you guys have any recommendations for similar classes? I just need to take something to them shows I did DD about other options, and I am angling to go SEC401 anyways. It seems like ISC2 CBK is kind of loosely similar in difficulty level at about half the cost, but it seems much more conceptual/managerial and a lot less hands on based on my research. Any advice for online instructor-led security classes that are similar in scope/quality to SANS? This is mostly about the experience of the class and coming away with some useful skills, a cert isn't that important.
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# ? Feb 15, 2018 19:06 |
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my bitter bi rival posted:not sure if this is the right place for this but I'm trying to get my company to pony up for SANS 401 and they are open to the idea but are busting my balls about the price of it. Mostly, they want to know if there's a class of similar quality that is available for cheaper. Do you guys have any recommendations for similar classes? I just need to take something to them shows I did DD about other options, and I am angling to go SEC401 anyways. Sec+ maybe? I'd probably just go with that as they are both DOD 8570 IAT Level 2 certs, but there isn't a direct comparison to other non-SANS courses which is part of the reason popular SANS classes are often waitlisted and cost 6300 these days including cert attempt. Eric Cole, the course author wrote the Security Bible though (on Amazon) which has loose ties to the course. How new are you to security and in what area? If you've got some time and experience under your belt I'd consider going for a higher level class since work busting your balls about price says to me you're not going to get that many future SANS courses. I can make some recommendations if you want to consider other options there. I've done the certs for GSEC, GMON, GCIH, and GPEN and taken the classes for GCFE and GYPC (studying). Bloodborne fucked around with this message at 16:46 on Feb 21, 2018 |
# ? Feb 21, 2018 16:44 |
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So I think I'm going to go for the MCSE: Cloud Platform and Infrastructure but I'm undecided on the best way to go for it so I'm looking for suggestions. Basically I'm torn between which MCSA to get as a prerequisite, Windows Server 2016 or Cloud Platform. I'm more interested in the cloud stuff and it's one less test but the server track seems more practical career wise. Do you folks have any thoughts on which MCSA is the better route?
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# ? Feb 22, 2018 04:27 |
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Am I correct in assuming the ICND2 should require a roughly equal amount of preparation as the ICND1? I’m working my way through Pluralsight’s series for the ICND1, which is 39 hours, but out of curiosity I looked at the ICND2 portion and it’s only 12 hours. I’m guessing the ICND1 requires more time to be spent on introductory networking concepts but I still thought it was interesting there was such discrepancy.
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# ? Feb 25, 2018 01:15 |
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Icnd1 is a mile wide. Icnd2 starts getting deeper on those topics. Your study time should be about the same but by the time icnd2 study comes up there's less a video can tell you and more you have to learn from labs.
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# ? Feb 25, 2018 04:18 |
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Taking the final CCNP Collaboration test on Wednesday. I started taking this series of four tests last June, and have been studying for about two years with some breaks (plus hands on all day every day). I can't wait for this pain in the rear end to be over. So much of the material is extremely outdated, but I've learned a lot along the way by looking up the right way to do things vs. the way Cisco decided to focus when they made the exam questions.
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# ? Feb 26, 2018 18:39 |
RVWinkle posted:So I think I'm going to go for the MCSE: Cloud Platform and Infrastructure but I'm undecided on the best way to go for it so I'm looking for suggestions. Basically I'm torn between which MCSA to get as a prerequisite, Windows Server 2016 or Cloud Platform. I'm more interested in the cloud stuff and it's one less test but the server track seems more practical career wise. Do you folks have any thoughts on which MCSA is the better route? I think it comes down to what you have experience with and what you want do target more of. I took the 2016 MCSA upgrade just because it was one exam and I've been doing more on-prem Windows Server stuff, and I like that. I want more exposure to Azure but a practice lab just isn't the same. I did get the MCSE Cloud Platform and Infra cert since that too was one exam. It's basically 75% Windows Server, 25% MS cloud stuff. Maybe more 80/20 depending on what questions are in your exam. If you have no previous MCSAs in Windows Server, and you're inclined to be an Azure specialist, go for the Cloud Platform MCSA. It seems like it'll expose you to the work of public-facing cloud environments more so than the Server 2016 MCSA does. That focuses on the idea of a hyperconverged Windows stack running in a private or hybrid cloud environment along with standard server infrastructure changes to back it all up.
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# ? Feb 26, 2018 21:09 |
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passed tshoot today. finally done with ccnp.
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# ? Feb 27, 2018 00:06 |
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Congrats
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# ? Feb 27, 2018 00:32 |
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From Stanly:quote:VMware has informed academies worldwide that they will no longer be able to offer classes through Continuing Education programs as of July 31, 2018. Additionally, VMware is not going to allow academies to teach the official Install, Configure and Manage or Optimize and Scale classes as of July 31, 2018. A new VCA level course that will fulfill the class requirement for VCP certification will be available via an option in our curriculum program. More details will be available later this year.
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# ? Feb 27, 2018 22:25 |
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Someone talk to me about ITIL Foundations cert
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# ? Feb 27, 2018 22:27 |
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sudo rm -rf posted:passed tshoot today. Goongrats! I also passed my final CCNP Collaboration exam. I thought there were an even greater number of trick questions on this test than any other I’ve taken. There was definitely a “choose the two right answers” question where there were three correct choices.
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# ? Feb 28, 2018 16:04 |
Diva Cupcake posted:From Stanly: loving balls, this is going to really make it suck to keep VCPs current. Does VMware not realize that not everyone is milking company dollars for their required course?!
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# ? Feb 28, 2018 21:36 |
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Diva Cupcake posted:From Stanly: Yikes..
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# ? Mar 2, 2018 06:41 |
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Hey everyone, I’m wrapping up my ICND1 studies in the next couple weeks and prepping for the exam, and at the risk of getting ahead of myself I’m considering my next steps after. Background: Spent 10 years previously working in healthcare and switched to working a helpdesk position about 6 months ago. Given that I’m getting a late start I’m trying to hit the ground running with building my resume and getting off the helpdesk. I was thinking about pursuing a Server 2016 MCSA to head toward a more systems admin route, but given my experience level the Server MCSA seems pretty daunting. Would the Windows 10 MCSA be worthwhile as a stepping stone in that direction or would it be too narrowly focused on desktop support?
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# ? Mar 3, 2018 03:26 |
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Depends on your experience using Windows. Have you had to investigate RegKeys, Drivers, etc. in the past? If so, skip towards the MCSA.
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# ? Mar 3, 2018 07:28 |
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Passed my GWAPT from SANS last month and my boss is paying for two more this year. I’m taking the advanced webapp course next. But I still have to decide on the second. It just has to relate to security somehow. I’m thinking of Cyber Threat Intelligence course from SANS as it looks interesting and meets the buzzword quota. Anyone have an idea? Doesn’t have to be from SANS. I have the sec+, CSA+, OSCP and CISSP.
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# ? Mar 5, 2018 00:11 |
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General question for those that browse here; how often are you picking up a new cert? once a year? once every couple years? multiple a year?
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# ? Mar 5, 2018 14:01 |
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# ? Apr 19, 2024 13:34 |
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Kashuno posted:General question for those that browse here; how often are you picking up a new cert? once a year? once every couple years? multiple a year? I went from once every couple of years to once a year. Gonna see if I can do 2 this year.
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# ? Mar 5, 2018 14:51 |