I thought so. Then my honest advice to you would be to not waste time in attaining certifications. Learn all you can and start with a small assignment (freelance if necessary). Certifications do not even minutely substitute for experience in the field, not in actuality and not in the minds of recruiters within the industry.
I have been down this path and learned this the hard way. On Jun 2, 9:03 pm, xueming <[email protected]> wrote: > Thanks. Yes, I mean some vendor's certificates. > Well, since this is new field to me, so the main purpose to me of > getting some certificates is to establish some credit and eventually > get a job in this field. > > I have learned VB.NET and working on C# now, Hope this help to clear > my question a bit. > > On Jun 2, 1:08 am, Cerebrus <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > I think you are referring to certifications offered by vendors such as > > Microsoft. In that case, my list would be: > > > 1. None. > > 2. None. > > 3. None. > > > Why, you ask. The answer is that you have not clearly defined the > > purpose behind wanting to attain the certifications. What do you > > expect them to substitute for? > > > On Jun 2, 10:23 am, xueming <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > Hello, > > > > I amplanning to switch to .NET after several years of design > > > experiences at telecom industry. Since I don't have working > > > experiences in .NET, I plan to get a few certificates to get me > > > started. Would anyone suggest a list of certificates that I should get/ > > > consider? A prioritized list woul be appreciated, but ang suggestion > > > are welcome !! > > > > Thanks in advance.- Hide quoted text - > > > - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text -
