I’ve been a software engineer for 10 years now but want to work with Linux more in a professional setting (not to mention the number of layoffs in the the dev industry has me thinking a backup plan might be a good idea). I have been using Linux exclusively on my personal machine for about 15 years now so I’m not too worried about passing the LFCS but I’m wondering of its worth it. What kind of job opportunities would it open for me? Should I focus more on dev ops? Security? Straight SysAdmin?

  • @[email protected]
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    81 year ago

    Employer here (UK)! I’m probably not normal being the MD and running Arch (actually) on my gear. I had to switch from Gentoo because I kept on burning myself.

    For me, something like the LFCSA is something I respect because it is practical. Back in the day I did something similar (Novell I think). I’ve also grabbed a VMware … whatever … and that was a memory test and a waste of money. Who cares if you can quote the maximums?

    When I’m hiring, I want to see application and knowledge and not a plethora of industry “quali-wankery”! You can always search for facts but knowing how to apply them is what I want to see.

    Be flexible but do try to develop what sort of direction you want to take. What floats your boat out of dev ops, sysadmin etc?

    You could also consider self employment/consultancy. I sort of fell into it 23 years ago …

    • @SimonSaysStuff
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      1 year ago

      You could also consider self employment/consultancy.

      Would you recommend this if OP is in the UK?