Zoom Picks Zoom Picks
Search:    Home :> About Us :> Security & Privacy :> ToS :> Add Your Link :> Add Your Article   
 
 

3 Ways To Protect Your Laptop

Today's businesses and their employees make frequent use of laptop computers. The portability of the ... - Mila Levkovsky and Marilee Veniegas
 

Has Anyone Seen My Website?

Hooray!! You've done it. Your website is up and running. You've even added one of those neat little ... - Roschelle Nelson
 

Increase Your Web Profits With The Power of Free

Use free offerings to increase your web profits. - Donny Lowy
 
 

Affiliate Site Development: Writing Good Content

How to write good content for your affiliate sites. - Karen Kari
 

Learn about the Google Search Engine Tools

Think you know everything about searching with Google? Think again. Believe it or not, there are man ... - Shell Harris
 
 

Home –› Computers & Networking –› IT Certification
 

Certify This

 

Within the scope of my career, the advent of technical certifications is possibly the worst thing that ever came down the pike. I have already written some material on this subject, but this practice has caused me so much anguish, I wanted to add more fuel to the fire. If one is willing to overlook the fact that certification testing was originally introduced by software and hardware vendors as a means to produce additional streams of income, there are other issues that make this practice even more distasteful.

One analogy would be to imagine that someone was interested in hiring you to build a house. For purposes of making the story interesting, let us say you happen to be a master builder. Before you build the house for the customer, you must satisfy their confidence in your credentials by proving your skills before you are allowed to start work. You have agreed to take a test that was put together by other builders. On the day of the test, you have a general idea what the test will be about, and with your knowledge of house building, you decide passing the examination will not be much trouble for you.

When you arrive on the testing site, you are ushered into a room where you find a pile of materials. You are then told you will be required to construct a home using only the information you have in your head, and you are not allowed to refer to specifications, plans, tools or references associated with building the type of home the authors had in mind when they created the test. In addition, you will also have to know where each nail, screw, bolt, and fastener is recommended to go, and what angle is optimal for holding the structure together. You are allowed to make a few mistakes, but if the structure you build does not resemble the model intended, you will not pass the test. Also, you will have to complete the project within a predetermined amount of time, roughly equivalent to what the test creators determined as reasonable for kind of house you are assigned to build.

Of course, on the first try, you fail to complete the task successfully, but being a master builder, you take mental note of the various materials you saw while you were in the room. Your customer is willing to give you another try at passing the test, so you take what you can remember about the first crack at the assignment, and spend some time researching building plans before the next test date. You discover a set of plans that contains the same materials you remember from the test, and memorize as much as you can from the specifications you dug up in your research.

On the second try, you go right to the task, but discover there are now some slightly different materials included in the pile that were not there the first time, and decide the plans you studied were perhaps not the correct model for your project. You have failed again.

Using all the knowledge you gathered from the first two attempts, you are expected to take the test one more time. Your research before the test shows two slightly different models are possible from the materials you have memorized from your tests, and depending on the presence of a specific kind of guttering, you will be building one type of model or the other. On the third try at the test, you manage to struggle through completing the structure, and successfully complete the test with a passing grade, despite some errors you made in the design.

Feeling very good about yourself, you are satisfied that your credentials for building houses have been satisfactorily verified. Just before your customers agree to hire you for building their home, they suddenly have some real questions associated with their particular job. They decide you must also be equally qualified in how to build boats, automobiles, telescopes, and small aircraft as well. After all, building is building isnt it? They ask you if you would be willing to pay for the tests to prove your acuity for building the other items associated with their dream home, and if not they will just have to go on looking for a master builder who can satisfy all their requirements.

At this point in the negotiation, you smile, wish your potential customer luck, and push away from the table. Though certain aspects of this tale may be slightly exaggerated, welcome to the world of current technology expectations. The situation is enough to make you want to turn away from further interest in the industry, and ask those who participate in these practices to certify this.

Author: John Dir
 
Author Bio:
John Dir is a famous writer. John likes to scribble articles about this topic.
This article can be searched using: search engine optimization certification, microsoft certification, computer security certification
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
An E-zine Publisher's Survival Guide
 
Six Easy White-Listing Ways... Stop Losing Important Emails!
 
How To Boost Your Wisconsin Site's Search Engine Ranking - Part 3
 
Search Engine Ranking: Anchor Text is Key
 
Getting Back to Basics: Creating a Logo from Start to Finish
 
Disc and Data Recovery
 
Internet Connection Fails
 
Introduction to Autoresponders
 
Why Do You Want to Link With A Home Business And Affiliate Website?
 
Video in a Flash
 
 
 
Get 3 way links
 
 

Business & Services

 

Careers & Employment

 

Automobile & Automotive

 

Recreation & Entertainment

 

Society & Communities

 

Computers & Networking

 

Sports & Adventure

 

Home & Garden

 

Lifestyle & Fashion

 

Art & Culture

 

Events & News

 

Games & Play

 

Shopping & Auction

 

Self Help

 

Teens & Kids

 

Fitness & Health

 

Policies & Law

 

Finance & Banking

 

Cooking & Drinking

 

Travel & Accommodation

 

Technology & Science

 

Academics & Education

 

Property & Agents

 

Healthcare & Medicine

 
Home :> Security & Privacy :> ToS  
Copyright © 2006-2008 www.zoompicks.com - All Rights Reserved.