Nadav Har'El wrote: > You keep bringing up the "education" you have. What kind of "education" > would they expect a kid to have? a Ph.D. in computer science? A RHCE? > No way. The question is not what your education is, but rather what you > know. If you show them that you are a Unix (or Windows, or whatever) guru, > I doubt they'll care where you learned it. Even if you're not a guru, but > are just quite good at it, it might be ok.
When I was a sysadmin at the Computer Science Institute at Hebrew U, we had 3 high school students who were working there part time. They started as volunteers. One had been taking courses there while working and finished his bachelor's degree a few months later. He got a very good job for the Israeli government. Two of the other students finished high school and went to sysadmin jobs in the army. Students from the ORT school across the street who had taken the computer hardware or software curriculum also got jobs in the army in their field. So yes, you can have education, and yes it matters. Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson Bloomberg L.P., BFM (Israel) 2 hours ahead of London, 7 hours ahead of New York. Tel: 972-(0)3-6944-211 Fax: 972-(0)3-6944-225 Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ================================================================= To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
