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RE: questions asked during network engineer interview


From: <adamv0025 () netconsultings com>
Date: Thu, 23 Jul 2020 10:03:15 +0100

Mark Tinka
Sent: Thursday, July 23, 2020 5:04 AM

On 23/Jul/20 01:04, Brandon Martin wrote:


Of course, there's also plenty of folks out there without them or any
certs at all that are just as useful in practice.  Getting those
particular certifications does, however, seem to be a useful path to
learning things that are actually of use in the "real world".  I look
at such certificates similar to how I'd look at a 2- or 4-year degree
in a related IT field and just a somewhat different, and perhaps more
approachable for the self-coached or differently-learning, path.

We live in a time where I am concerned about the engineers we
are creating, where point & click seems to trump basic understanding + CLI
knowledge. My concern is when it all goes to hell at 3AM, do the next
generation of network engineers have the base fundamentals to understand
why iBGP isn't coming up, even though you can "ping" and IGP adjacencies
are up and stable?

Hopefully well end up in a world where all checks one can do to figure out why iBGP session is down along with 
suggested corrective actions will be coded in some network self-healing workflow. 
But to answer your question, probably no, cause current industry is systematically converting network engineers into 
coders. 

adam
   


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