How Do I Describe Being Weird?
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@scottalanmiller said:
I can't even on this one!!
Can I add another platter to my hard drive for extra space? /sarcasm
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@scottalanmiller wow....thats all I can say. Although in the 90s I did have these on my 33mhz 486DX
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@BRRABill said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I can't even on this one!!
You had an even, professional response, though.
I guess that means he can, even! lol.
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Hey everybody, I started looking through SMB IT Journal and found my way over to start looking around here too.
I'm pretty new to learning about IT. I started a little while back, focusing on networking and CCNA study material. I like it but have also gotten distracted and taken a number of tangents off into other areas.
Do you all have any books or resources you'd recommend toward getting some basics down cold in any area? I'd like to work toward solid understanding and try to avoid learning in ways where I might end up drifting down any of these paths mentioned here..
I'm open to learning about any area. Networking, Linux and system administration have been some of the most interesting to me so far, and I keep sensing I'll be needing to start a base in programming too.
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To the original question, I know it just seems harder to get an idea across in some situations - when it feels like you've completely summed up what you're expressing and it's not getting you very far, where can you go from there?
It's fun in those times like you mentioned above, when you can just spit it out how it comes out and it works for everybody. It seems like you stay on the right track of trying to figure out why your senses might have started tingling, to express that.
During some bigger impasses, sometimes it's helped me to try to see what might be in the way of relating. Maybe backing up and looking at a misconception about something I took for granted can help everything start shifting.
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@ryanblahnik said:
I'm open to learning about any area. Networking, Linux and system administration have been some of the most interesting to me so far, and I keep sensing I'll be needing to start a base in programming too.
A programming background or expertice isn't needed, but it certainly helps. Before you decide on a programming language, you might learn Python. Also you should really decide on what you want to work on, Windows Linux, or Other.
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@ryanblahnik said:
I'm open to learning about any area. Networking, Linux and system administration have been some of the most interesting to me so far, and I keep sensing I'll be needing to start a base in programming too.
I would open a new thread for each topic you are interested in resources for and we can talk about ones that we know or dig up some stuff to check out.