The more I look at that picture, the more confused I get. I'm convinced it's gotta be AI generated.
I'm at about 140k with no college education. 10 years experience. Not really required but certs help tremendously.
I'd believe that overhauls in this sense means that they have completely restructured/breathed new life to their campaign and thus gained favorability
Things would probably be different if teachers made more money or if the requirements were higher. For most people who become teachers, it definitely was not their intended career progression. Just something they landed on.
I think for a lot of people, reading of kind of a luxury they don't have time for. Kind of hard to hone your literacy skills when you're living hand to mouth.
Then again, I'm a self taught engineer from a poor immigrant family. So who the hell knows.
If you say you want to work on the infrastructure side of things, that means networking. Routing and switching. Get a CCNA and you can get a job at 75k in most major cities. Few years experience and eventually a CCNP will put you at about 125k.
Right now, the milk and honey of cloud/data center stuff is NFaaS(network fabric as a service), aka SDN(software defined networking), aka IAC(infrastructure as code) but at the end of the day it's about working and managing infra as a product of SDLC. You'll need a strong networking foundation, familiarity with one or more programming languages, familiarity with working with SCMs, familiarity with IAC methodologies, familiarity with Ansible, familiarity with Jinja2, etc. If you have all that and you're a rockstar engineer you'll be at about 150k as an NFaaS engineer.
Otherwise, other "cloud" roles are going to be 100% server side. Don't know much about that side of the house.
vi is basically gonna be on every Linux based machine until the end of time. Nano usually needs to be installed, which in corpo environments, you may not have the ability to do that. I made my peace with vim for sysadmin stuff or simple changes like editing yaml files. Vi also has some pretty good features out of the box which are good to learn.
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