flakpanzer

joined 1 year ago
[–] flakpanzer@programming.dev 4 points 1 year ago

I have a System76 Lemur Pro 10, while the hardware quality is poor (poor speakers, poor quality chassis, poor trackpad), it has been pretty solid otherwise for the last 4 years, with PopOS as my daily driver which I really love.

For work, I use a 2019 MacBook which has great hardware, but I am not a fan of MacOS. Will soon ask for upgrade to an M1. (My perfect laptop would be Apple hardware running PopOS).

My next laptop will likely be a Framework laptop unless System76 rolls out their own hardware which is much much improved than their current lot. I hope my current laptop will probably last 2-3 more years, if not more. (btw I use Steam Deck for gaming needs)

[–] flakpanzer@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago

I've been studying BSTs recently with the book "Algo & DS in Python by Goodrich-Tamassia", this article seems to be the next thing to read. Thanks for sharing.

[–] flakpanzer@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Hey thanks for sharing. I'd like to do this in rust too. Did you do the course or the book or both?

[–] flakpanzer@programming.dev 4 points 1 year ago

chota means "small" in Hindi/Urdu, so I can proudly declare: I have a chota Chota

 

TLDR: I am not talking about the CCNA material (which is great for learning networking, albeit a bit too much detail for software devs), I am asking about the certificate itself, is it worth it to spend months preparing for the certificate, spending $300 on it, passing it and then putting it on your resume? Does it matter if I am open to move to DevOps positions in the future?

Background: I am a self-taught Software dev with about 4 YOE, and in order to teach myself Networking & CyberSecurity, stumbled upon this Jeremy IT Labs UT Course on CCNA. The course has been tremendously helpful in teaching me how networks actually work. It has a lot more detail than I what I needed (the ios cli, labs & configuration etc), but it has been worth it so far (I'm on day 55). However, now I am wondering if I should spend the money and effort to actually get the CCNA certificate itself. (I know 1 course is not enough to pass that certificate, I will have to spend many more hours diving into the details, memorizing things and making connections between concepts and topics)