Re: Request for advice

2012-06-14 Thread Super Bisquit
On Tue, Jun 12, 2012 at 1:16 PM, Dru Lavigne dru.lavi...@att.net wrote:

 I'm curious. When will the
 examination cover other architectures such
 as POWER/PowerPC, SPARC, and ARM?
 Having an exam for such architectures would get the BSDs
 recognition
 as a reliable system with the Power group. Support for ARM
 in the exam
 could increase the use of the BSDs in embedded devices; and,
 the same
 is also true for certain Power architectures.

 I am aware that the standard architecture being used is i386
 and
 amd64. I am also aware that development is taking place on
 the
 architectures mentioned.


 The BSDA exam is for system administration, not development.

 Cheers,

 Dru

Such systems require that the administrator know Forth or other
commands for the boot loader. These commands are also needed for
accessing different settings prior to booting the OS.

On POWER/PowerPC systems, booting a different installation requires
the person to know the exact partition because the boot loader will
look for the first available UFS2 partition.

If nothing else, such should be added for those who wish to administer
or do administer such systems. It can be added as an optional section.
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Re: Request for advice

2012-06-11 Thread Super Bisquit
I'm curious. When will the examination cover other architectures such
as POWER/PowerPC, SPARC, and ARM?
Having an exam for such architectures would get the BSDs recognition
as a reliable system with the Power group. Support for ARM in the exam
could increase the use of the BSDs in embedded devices; and, the same
is also true for certain Power architectures.

I am aware that the standard architecture being used is i386 and
amd64. I am also aware that development is taking place on the
architectures mentioned.

On 6/11/12, Dru Lavigne dru.lavi...@att.net wrote:
 Hello,
 I'm currently planning on taking the BSD Association
 certification, as described here.  (http://www.bsdcertification.org/)

 Although I am primarily doing so for personal, rather than
 economic reasons, I did want to ask whether or not it
 possibly *would* add to a resume, in the opinions of people
 here.  As much as I've loved using FreeBSD myself, I've
 been looking for trend and market share numbers on the Web
 recently, and what I've found has been fairly depressing;
 the indication usually seems to be a gradual, long term
 decline of the three major BSDs, with virtually all UNIX
 market share moving in the direction of Debian Linux.
 With that said, I've also noticed that FreeBSD is still
 visible on Netcraft's list of the most reliable ISPs.

 I consider this tragic, because after close to 15 years of
 at least intermittent use of both systems, I have developed
 a belief that FreeBSD is vastly technically superior to any
 form of Linux that I have used, including Debian.

 So I wanted to ask; how possible is it still, to become
 gainfully employed as a BSD administrator?  Once I have
 the BSD certification, will it be necessary to concede to
 reality, and also seek certification in Linux as well?
 I have long considered that idea, but the problem is that
 Linux training generally costs a minimum of $2,000, and I do
 not have that type of money available.


 Disclaimer: I'm the current chair of the BSD certification group (BSDCG).

 The BSDCG gets requests quite often from employers who are looking for
 admins with BSD skills. We refer them to our BSDA certified linked in group
 as its members are all BSDA certified. There is also a linkedin group for
 those interested in BSD certification which is a good resource for
 networking with other admins who are interested in BSD.

 We have also received several reports back from certificants indicating that
 the reason why they were hired over someone else was because they were BSDA
 certified.

 I wrote an article for the February issue of BSD Mag (available for free
 download from bsdmag.org) that describes why one would want to be BSD
 certified, even if not motivated by economic reasons or even if one is
 already happily employed.

 Bottom line, if you're interested in system administration, the more
 Unix-like skills that you can get, the better. A Linux certification will
 only provide a subset of these skills. Having both Linux and BSD
 certification provides a fuller skillset.

 Cheers,

 Dru

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Small bit of news

2011-04-04 Thread Super Bisquit
For anyone interested, I'm building gnome3 packages for sparc64 and powerpc.
I'm doing this on my own; so, please be patient as I get things set up. When
all is ready, I'll clean out my old site and place all new packages.

Thanks.
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Introducing others to the BSD family of systems

2011-04-04 Thread Super Bisquit
http://www.daemonforums.org/showthread.php?t=5845
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