CompTIA just developed their new objectives. It's the first time they've developed their objectives since about the year 2000. For the last decade CompTIA was using the LPI objectives because they were using the LPI exams under license.
Understand that LPI and it's exam and objective development strategy is two decades old and well flushed out. This is out to three levels. The first level is aligned with the other two. CompTIA provides no such second or third level. LPI wouldn't adopt their program and objectives any more than red hat would for the same reasons. -- Sent from my Moto G7 Power, apologies for any brevity as well as the satanic versus of autocorrect Bryan J Smith - http://linkedin.com/in/bjsmith On Fri, May 3, 2019, 14:57 BHL <[email protected]> wrote: > Should LPI also use the CompTIA objectives? CompTIA Linux+ validates the > skills of IT professionals with hands-on experience configuring, > monitoring, and supporting servers running the Linux operating system. The > new exam has an increased focus on the following topics: *security, > kernel modules, storage & visualization, device management at an enterprise > level, git & automation (Chef/Ansible?), networking & firewalls, server > side & command line, server (vs. client-based) coverage, troubleshooting > and SELinux*. And a slightly longer exam (75-100 questions) > > > _______________________________________________ > lpi-examdev mailing list > [email protected] > https://list.lpi.org/mailman/listinfo/lpi-examdev
_______________________________________________ lpi-examdev mailing list [email protected] https://list.lpi.org/mailman/listinfo/lpi-examdev
