Novell's Certified Linux Engineer 248
AEnertia writes "Novell have been quick in moving ahead with their recent aquisition of SuSE. I was browsing their site when I found this page describing their new certification (CLE) under their certifications programs. Looks like they are positioning their well respected certification program for their newest asset."
I just hope.. (Score:5, Funny)
Unique test for this cert... (Score:5, Interesting)
the test
The Novell Practicum test for the Novell Certified Linux Engineer (Novell CLE) will require you to prove your Novell Nterprise Linux Services knowledge in a "real life" setting. Your knowledge of both Linux and Novell Nterprise Linux Services will be tested.
The practicum is basically a remote connection to a live server bank with Linux installed. Using the remote access session, you will be given a scenario with tasks to complete. These tasks will include configuring Novell Services on Linux, performing basic Linux tasks, and may even get into some troubleshooting.
You will need to perform these tasks just as you would in a real environment. You will be evaluated automatically on each of the servers and will you receive a pass or fail exam result. The length of the exam is estimated to be about two hours.
There is no "written" test anticipated at this time.
For once, there is nothing written, and you actually have to demonstrate proficiency! No more "wannabes" (*cough*MCSE*cough*) merley memorising and getting the Certification.
Re:Unique test for this cert... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Unique test for this cert... (Score:4, Interesting)
Good for them (Score:2, Insightful)
BTW, its pretty lame dissing on MCSE's- the paper ones generally get exposed in the real world, and since there are lots of us out there who can fix most NT issues with our eyes closed, I can very much say a real MCSE is an asset to any company. Its not like there arent paper CCNAs, CNAs, etc.
But its easy to make fun of someone else, especially w
Re:Good for them (Score:4, Insightful)
Its an even poorer craftsman who cant tell a good tool from a bad one.
Re:Good for them (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Good for them (Score:3, Informative)
2. Windows is extremely well documented; I never lack for referen
Re:Good for them (Score:3, Interesting)
2. You MS guys have more experience looking for answers to your questions. When I run into a MS problem, I search TechNet and various sources only to find the question that I am looking for but not a good answer. With linux, if I run the search on google, chances are, the answer is in the search string for each matching item.
3. As for the test thing, well, thats up for debate.
Re:Good for them (Score:3, Interesting)
2. I sometimes use google. It actually links back to a lot of technet articles. As I said, MS really needs to work on their technet search engine.
I think the issue is just experience. When something breaks, I can think for a minute on what process the issue is supposed to go thru, and see where in that process the error is occuring. From that, I will know approximately what is going wrong. Im guessing any other OS would troubleshoot the same way, its just
Re:Good for them (Score:5, Insightful)
Its also quite easy for people to make fun of things they dont understand; I love how people always say MS stuff is simplistic, until they need to fix it. Then they just say its poorly designed. Maybe if they spent time trying to understand how the OS or application does things, instead of complaining about it, they could fix it.
Actually that's not my problem with Windows. My problem is that it's too complex, too convoluted, and simply lacks the tools to properly diagnose and repair. Sure you can buy third party tools to make up for some of these deficiencies but I'd rather use Linux. The configuration for pretty much everything is plain text and documented freely instead of hidden behind a single-point-of-failure binary registry and anonymous GID identifiers. The system internals are all public and I can access any part of it I need without gagging NDAs and/or paying for the privilege and finally -- I am not tied to one megacorp with a penchant for monopolistic practises and stifling innovation. I have enough problems with running a business that I don't need to compound the issue by welcoming the vampire into my house.
Basically my beef with Windows and my desire to use Linux stems from the simple fact that when something does go wrong, I can fix it far easier and without paying for the privilege. And in those cases when Microsoft is either unwilling or unable to fix something, I can always hire a programmer to fix it for me.
Re:Good for them (Score:2, Insightful)
This [windows system configuration] has never been an issue for me, since TechNet documents just about anything you need to know. Understanding how the registry works helps a lot, too, and Ive never found the registry to be a single point of failure (well, misconfiguration can be that on any platform).
Any time I've tried to find out anything nontrivial on TechNet I've come up empty. A recent example was optimizing SMB to tell it that it was perfectly fine to fragment packets so that I could get better
Re:Good for them (Score:2)
there is a book which I think its called "Windows NT Plumbing". My copy is at the office, but its most likely in there.
Any monkey can say they support Windows and their typical response is "reboot, hmm ok, reinstall" -- I don't know of any other operating system where that is SO
Re:Good for them (Score:2)
And here I always thought they did it by reverse-engineering Apple's Macintosh OS, selling the (incredibly buggy) results as pre-installed software on cheap Asian-sourced hardware, and undercutting everyone else just enough that people would buy it. A couple of decades of arm-twisting and other illegal practices later, and we have the
Re:Good for them (Score:2, Interesting)
"If you cant be smart, you can at least act superior."
We understand how an OS and applications do things, that is why we prefer Linux. I do not need an abstraction layer protecting me from the horrors of the hardware/OS interface. I do not need a monopoly telling me what I can and can't do with the hardware I bought. I do not need forced upgrades, poor security, bloated code, and a GHz or better procesor to type a letter or browse the internet.
Most of all, I don't
Re:Good for them (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem with fixing (and knowing) a Windows system is many times more complex than fixing a *nix system. It's not because the system itself is inherrently more complex, it's because it's more heavily obscured and much less documented.
But that's besides the point. A windows system -is- more complex, and needlessly so. The people that designed the Windows registry don't even understand it completely, how are windows admins or an
Re:Good for them (Score:2)
Seriously, there are orders of magnitude more paper based MCSE's than people who know what they are doing. Most of them do not get exposed because pretty much any idiot can work on a windows system. You can't do much with them and therefore there is not much to figure out.
I think it's a fairly safe bet to say I know more about windows than 90% of the tech related employees at Microsoft. Some of the developers may know a bit more but they ch
Re:Good for them (Score:2)
Re:Good for them (Score:2)
Yes you can get tools there that will get the job done. A phillips screwdriver is a phillips screwdriver wherever you get it from
Re:Good for them (Score:5, Interesting)
You're right - a good MCSE is an asset to a company running Windows. Heck - a good admin familiar with his employer's arhictecture is an asset to any company. But I disagree with your dismisal of paper MCSE's.
Maybe its the difference between your working environment and mine. A real possibility since I've worked both within outstanding resource-rich environments and with organizations who, to be polite, are simply cheap. In any case, I have seen a real market for the stereotypical paper MCSE. They exist. And they keep their jobs.
Don't get me wrong - not all MCSEs are of that sort. I've met some very technical Windows types that had a rather in-depth knowledge of the platform. Which has lead to some really great technical discussions (and some very handy exchanges of expertise from time to time). But I've found them to rare.
This is kind of an odd thing to say. After all, when do we throw a Windows admin at a Solaris system?
Its interesting that the tool anology comes up. The whole reason techies get impassioned about verious systems and whatnot has a lot to do with craftsmen and tools. After all, sysadmins tend to be craftsmen. And while an expert craftsman might be able to make a chair using nothing but a hammer and screwdriver, they're definately going to feel contrained. They won't be able to produce the level of work they know they could with the right tools (or at least tools they are comfortable with).
My work desktop environment right now is Win2K due to various contraints (office automation apps, a few Windows machines I have to keep an eye on, etc). Yet I go to quite a bit of trouble to make that environment as Unix-like as I can. I really prefer that environment. And I've been able to pull off a few things recently that have had my coworkers wowed (thanks to Cygwin).
One last point - I've experienced both sides. I started as a rather oblivious Windows admin. Then I had to pick up some Unix machines and found an environment that I preferred. I will only grudgingly admin a Windows machine from this point on (and I ocassionally still do). I can certainly understand why people do not want to work with Windows systems. But then - I suppose I can sypmathize with anybody who doesn't want to touch *nix (even if I don't agree with them).
Someone claiming that a *nix admin should just learn to fix Windows instead of complaining about it sounds more like ignorance to me than insight.
Re:Good for them (Score:2)
As I said, its the misconception people have that Windows is 'easy', and anybody can do it. So they try, and fail; for the most part, its hard NOT to work in IT and have no exposure to Windows, but they think being an expert on one platform somehow makes them an expert on another, and so to mask their lack of knowledge, they just say Windows is stupid and not made 'correctly'. Never mind the fact that
Re:Good for them (Score:3, Insightful)
But as you point this out, you have to keep in mind just who is fostering this perception.
First, it comes squarely from Microsoft. Windows has always been marketed as the easy solution. Even on the server. Heck - Microsoft even claims that Windows admins cost less. The implication here is that your admin doesn't have to be as experienced or skilled.
Secondly, Windows proponents will often push "ease of use
Re:Good for them (Score:3, Funny)
So can I... just hit enter a bunch of times in the Debian installer. (sorry, too easy)
Re:Unique test for this cert... (Score:2)
Since you are evaluated automatically by the servers, in what way is this fundamentally different from a written multiple choice test? There is no human on the other side to whom you are required to EXPLAIN the REASONS for what you are doing.
The Novell Practicum (oh, well, at least it sounds academic) is just another example of this
Re:Unique test for this cert... (Score:2)
In a multiple choice test you have 2 to 10 possibilites to choose from. In a real world setting your choices are practically unlimited.
Re:Unique test for this cert... (Score:2)
I agree that it makes no difference if there are 2 or 20 answers I have to choose from. But I think it is a different thing if I have to give my own answer (solving the problem without hints, i.e. possible answers to choose from).
Multiple choice type of educations given by for-profit-companies with tests corrected by computer programs does not foster or encourage problem solving skills.
I
Re:Unique test for this cert... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Unique test for this cert... (Score:2)
I was excited when I first heard about the Novell CLE, but it looks pretty watered down. The Red Hat (RHCE) test is 6 hours and includes troubleshooting, a written test, and configuring services with advanced administrative tasks.
IMHO Novell should start out a lot tougher. They can always relax the program, but if they set the initial bar too low and anyone can obtain th
Yikes (Score:5, Funny)
Just one? Might be an uphill battle for Novell then...
Re:Yikes (Score:4, Interesting)
If this one is high level enough, then it might be good. Problem of all exams is that they aren't hard enough and practically anybody can pass them
I went to RHCE, but I was really dissapointed with low level of knowledge to pass the exam. My M$ exams (fact for anybody who wants to pass them: just think commercialy M$ positive and you'll pass, absolute no knowledge needed just economical common sense) are pure need and if it is possible I rather shut up than say that I have them. Unfortunate that's a bussiness must have for me.
Re:Yikes (Score:2)
Re:Yikes (Score:2)
They should just make it hard so not anyone but knowledgeable can do it. Or everybody should start having X certified Genius exams to separate better from common, but I guess not even one company has some interest in doing that.
First thing you see... (Score:4, Funny)
Are they saying that we are lazy?
Re:First thing you see... (Score:2, Funny)
Kierthos
Re:First thing you see... (Score:2)
I'm proud to be lazy! (Score:4, Insightful)
I suggest that any good technically competent person is lazy, and someone I'd rather hire. Put yourself in a supervisory role for a moment. Who would you rather hire:
The second person, disliking the "fireman" syndrome so common in support departments, would have to be defined as lazy in that he/she is disinclined to work putting out fires. One can argue that the time spent in preventing the fires in the first place disqualifies the person from being called lazy. It's a shame that upper management tends to look at hard numbers, and it is much more difficult to provide a number for prevented problems, than it is to provide a number for solved problems. Upper management sees that person A solved 30 problems, person B ( the lazy one ) solved 10 problems in the same time period. However, management often does not quantify the extra work person B did to prevent those 20 problems, they just give person A great praise, and quietly replace person B for "underperforming".
Suffice it to say, I'd rather hire the lazy ones.
SCO certification (Score:5, Funny)
What do you guys think? Worth getting?
Re:SCO certification (Score:5, Funny)
Re:SCO certification (Score:5, Funny)
1. You have a network of 90 desktop Linux PCs, 4 dual-procressor Linux workgroup servers, and 1 16-way Linux enterprise server. How much do you pay SCO?
a) $142,000
b) $62,000,000
c) $118,000,000
d) All of the above
The Price of Doing Certs (Score:5, Funny)
Could-a, should-a, would-a, didn't.
Bob-
Re:The Price of Doing Certs (Score:3, Interesting)
No Problem (Score:2)
Re:No Problem (Score:2)
Re:The Price of Doing Certs (Score:3, Insightful)
Novell had a Linux track years ago (Score:5, Interesting)
It appears from the website that this is just a single 5-day course on Novell Nterprise Services for Linux (Netware File and Print and Directory Services running on Linux), not a course on SuSE or Ximian. They suggest (but do not require) that you get a LPI certification first before taking the class.
It's kind of a stretch that they are calling this a Certified Linux Engineer, since there is no actual Linux training involved, just training on Novell's product running on Linux. In fact, the course material says that you should know Linux before taking the course.
So, unfortunately this seems like yet another empty certification, and shame on Novell for calling someone a Certified Linux Engineer when all they did was take a 5-day course on one of Novell's Linux products.
Re:Novell had a Linux track years ago (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Novell had a Linux track years ago (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Novell had a Linux track years ago (Score:2)
I agree than some PHBs (or maybe Pointy Haired People Who Hire Consultants) are clueless when it comes to what certs are good and bad, I do thing that in the IT industry people generally know the quality certification from the low-quality ones. I think most people now know that there are a lot of Paper MCSEs and CNEs out there, and they don't look for just that cert when hiring a consultant.
So, the problem with this certification from Novell is that it's called a Certified Linux Engineer, but it doesn't r
Novell's Linux distros (Score:2)
Two? Which two? SuSE I know about... are you referring to Ximian (which is a desktop shop, not a Linux distro)?
Re:Novell had a Linux track years ago (Score:2)
The Parent poster is wrong on so many levels.
1.) They DO require LPI Level 1 to be eligable for your CLE. They do not accept Comptia's Linux+ as they have said that it isn't open and impartial as LPI is, and they are deciding if RHCEs will be able to waive the LPI requirement.
2.) You don't have to take any courses whatsoever, but you might want to if you don't think you can pass the exam with self study.
Wow! (Score:5, Funny)
Okay, for all (three) of you who don't already know Linux, and who aren't interested in the "Novell" portions of this class, I'll be teaching GNU/Linux for the bargain price of (oh, it pains be to quote a figure so high) only $1,000 for a five day course!
Step right up!
If you're a bright class we might even get to advanced topics such as systems administration or software development with GCC and vi!
Re:Wow! (Score:2)
Re:Wow! (Score:5, Informative)
Egads, you've never worked in an environment with more than one server, have you? If I caught one of my guys doing that, I'd either fire him (if at my civilian job) or Article 15 him (if at my Reserve unit). Never, never, ever run "configure,make,make install", take a few extra steps and build an actual package, *then* install the software. This way you can:
* back out easily. 'rpm -e' or 'pkgrm' are easier than grepping through the Makefiles for all of the installed programs and piping that to 'find / -name $1 -exec rm' or whatever.
* copy the package to other servers and install quickly and easily. This allows you create once, install anywhere, and you can even script the installation process.
* avoid overwriting existing files. Any decent package manager will complain if the target file(s) already exists.
Re:Wow! (Score:2)
Re:Wow! (Score:2)
Re:Wow! (Score:2)
Re:Wow! (Score:2)
I've got $0.79 and some pocket lint, will that do?
Re:Wow! (Score:2)
and usually there's some extra niceys thrown in of course and blabba blabba blaa, i don't know what extra niceys come in this though.
of course i wouldn't be able t
Re:Wow! (Score:2)
2000$ isn't awfully much for five day a course that gets you certified in something
Most of the 5-day training courses are priced for companies who want training for their employees. They are generally way too expensive for individuals to pay for out of pocket.
If you want to get a Linux certification and not spend a lot of money (and you basically already have Linux skills and can do some self study), then the Linux Professional Institute Certification [lpi.org] is a better way to go. To reach Intermediate Level y
Re:Wow! (Score:2)
Re:Wow! (Score:2)
Good job as a garbage collector (Score:2)
I would, but it will cost you most-positive-fixnum dollars. But at least if you fail, you can still get a good job as a garbage collector.
I'm thinking of pursuing a career as a garbage collector. I'm not sure if I want to follow a reference count system or a mark and sweep system. Can you offer any advice? What skill set will get me a better carrer?
Thanks in advance.
Fake "engineer" certs should not be legal (Score:5, Insightful)
I know the difference between a real engineer and a fake one, but I'm not so sure the average guy on the street understands the distinction. I also suspect people in hiring positions give a lot more weight to a certification that pretends to be an engineering degree than they really should.
Re:Fake "engineer" certs should not be legal (Score:2, Insightful)
Becoming a real engineer takes time - a lot of time - digging down deep into the core of the matter, not just scratching the surface and pretending to know what's going on.
Unfortunately, the
Re:Fake "engineer" certs should not be legal (Score:5, Insightful)
Such a body would also help educational institutions in preparing their curricula and would promote ethical practice.
A Profession of IT would also elevate the standard of practice and protect our careers a little better than the current 'wild west' system.
Re:Fake "engineer" certs should not be legal (Score:2)
Re:Fake "engineer" certs should not be legal (Score:2, Flamebait)
This is why they usually end up getting pushed into management, so they get out of the way of the people who actually know what they're doing.
Re:Fake "engineer" certs should not be legal (Score:2)
Re:Fake "engineer" certs should not be legal (Score:5, Insightful)
That's funny, I get the same feeling when I hear people claim that their 4 year degree makes them an engineer. Last I checked you need to know the math and also be able to apply it. (It's that last part that university cannot teach.)
Re:Fake "engineer" certs should not be legal (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Fake "engineer" certs should not be legal (Score:2)
Re:Fake "engineer" certs should not be legal (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, it's also something that's potentially harmful. There is a reason that universities need to be accredited to offer engineering degrees, and that once you become a professional engineer (PEng) you can lose that license if you don't do your job properly.
A lot of people don't realize that calling yourself an 'engineer' carries the same sort of weight and responsibility as calling yourself a doctor or a lawyer. You have people's lives in your hands (and often on a bigger scale than doctors - when doctors screw up, one patient dies.. when engineers screw up, bridges fall down and many people die). You can have your engineering license revoked for bad pratice. And just like doctors and lawyers, you can get in a lot of trouble for praticing engineering without a license.
I've met a lot of MCSE's that couldn't solve their way out of a cardboard box, and yet, they have the word 'engineer' in their title. And these are the people designing and implementing often mission-critical systems that our society depends on.
The PEO [peo.on.ca] brought Microsoft Canada to court over this issue, and although Microsoft will still use the MSCE title, they (and people holding the title) are only allowed to use the acronym MSCE or full title, and are not allowed to call themselves simply 'engineers'. A lot more information on this can be found at PEO's Software Engineering [peo.on.ca] site.
Basically, Microsoft is not willing to change the title (citing it would cost them too much, and they like the branding it has), and want to continue using the term 'engineer'. The CCPE [www.ccpe.ca] and the various provincal bodies (PEO [peo.on.ca], APEGGA [apegga.org], etc) are now talking enforcement, saying anyone that misrepresents themselves is facing $50,000 fines.
Re:Fake "engineer" certs should not be legal (Score:2)
In Italy you have to "Ingeniere" before the name of engineers just like you add "Dottore" to the names of people with a PhD. In many european countries the schools have to be granted the right to deliver engineer diplomas by a governmental commission.
Re:Fake "engineer" certs should not be legal (Score:2)
It's the same in Canada: well, in the province of Ontario, anyway. Universities giving out engineering degrees must satisfy a fairly rigid set of criteria imposed by the Professional Engineers of Ontario, and no one is allowed to use the word "Engineer" otherwise.
Engineers can even act as the guarantor on a passport.
Re:Fake "engineer" certs should not be legal (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Fake "engineer" certs should not be legal (Score:2)
Undoubtedly true, but equally true is that companies give a lot more weight to a degree than they should period. Generally if you take out the courses that aren't really needed for doing the job you cut down that 4yrs to 3yrs, if you reprepare the material to be absorbed by the highest common denominator instead of the lowest, you chop it down to about 3-6
Re:Fake "engineer" certs should not be legal (Score:2, Insightful)
Most certifications abuse the term "engineer" as far as the scientific theory is concerned. The attendants are fed with pseudo-information and half-truths, leading them to believe they are worth their salt in real-life situations.
Suffice it to say that I have seen enough of those "engineers" fail when confronted even with the si
Re:Fake "engineer" certs should not be legal (Score:2)
Bleh (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Give me a break (Score:2)
2. someone who drives a choo-choo
How long does it last? (Score:5, Insightful)
Anyone know?
Good morning (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Good morning (Score:2)
Re:Good morning (Score:2)
This is not new (Score:3, Insightful)
Certifications are overrated (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Certifications are overrated (Score:2)
Obviously not, it is supposed to be an indication that you have these skills. Of course, a lot of existing certifications are not (but academic grades may be even worse in that regard), but you don't expect HR drones to test potential employees under real-world conditions, do you? They just cannot do that, they'd have to simulate things like your familiarity with the network, your frustration level after wor
Re:Certifications are overrated (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, I'm solaris 8 certed. Woopdeefuckingdoo. I was bored and the testing center was there. For $300 out of my pocket (reimbursed by my company), I can make an extra 5k a year. You do the math.
This has nothing to do with SuSE (Score:2, Insightful)
First job post! (Score:2, Funny)
Hmmm. Any old timers remember the 60's spy show "The Man from U.N.C.L.E."? Now we have the man from N.C.L.E. It would be quite fitting to show up to work in a Tuxedo.
Three Anecdotes - All True (Score:5, Interesting)
- One of the students in a class had a photographic memory. He didn't understand why everyone didn't just read the book and go take the exam while the book was still in short-term memory.
- The Sr. VP where I work as a mainframe sysprog asked me if I knew anyone who was good at Windows debugging. I told him I knew some MCSE types. He said that if his IT department were a karate dojo, "MCSE" would be equivalent to "white belt" (rank beginner).- An instructor in an SQL Server class related the tale about a forklift operator who got laid off. He kept seeing job ads for "MCDBA" and asked around to find out what that meant. He didn't have the cash to actually take the courses but he bought the books and passed the exam (through luck, I guess) on the 14th attempt. He landed a job making $160K per year and kept it for six months before they realized he didn't know beans. He ended up $80K richer, though.
Re:Three Anecdotes - All True (Score:2)
zerg (Score:2)
sort of.
Gentoo! (Score:2, Funny)
Why oh why PDF formatted docs? (Score:4, Interesting)
The only way to get more information on this topic from the SuSE website is to download the PDF formatted docs.
I appreciate the presentation-control aspects that PDF gives to documents, but I don't think that it's too much to ask that a simple webpage with text information on it be provided as an alternative. I realize this is slightly OT, but in the slim hope that some SuSE webmaster/PR people are reading the thread: please some new-fashioned good ol' XHTML would do nicely instead. Thanks.
I hope theyre really tough (Score:3, Insightful)
I think we desperately need tough Linux certs to aim for, certs which will in time be respected enough to be of greater weight than the college degrees. Right now theres no standard way for a company to look for a highly skilled linux technician who can be creative, knowledgeable and original in solving problems. They just go for students from the best universities who have taken lots of java pascal and ada courses.
Re:Oh no..... (Score:5, Funny)
OK, here's something new...
Q. Why did the MSCE cross the road?
A. Someone told him/her to.
Q. Why did the Certified Linux Eng. cross the road?
A. Someone told him/her not to.
(ok
Re:Oh no..... (Score:2)
Re:Oh no..... (Score:2)
In any case, I certainly won't be changing MY use of english to appease a Femmenazi anymore than I will to appease a grammar/spelling nazi.
Re:Oh no..... (Score:2)
ok
Hey Georgy, [slashdot.org] is that you ?