I work at a Corvette restoration and reproduction company. In customer service now but have done about every job in the company.
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I work at a Corvette restoration and reproduction company. In customer service now but have done about every job in the company.
Not bad. Everyone wants "The cloud" nowadays so the game is changing, but... still deal with dumb users, dumb software and failing hardware!
Are you in the field yet? What area are you trying to get in to? Learn what you can about virtualization... that's where it's at now. VMWare ESXi!
Aviation Instrument Tech. But I also freelance in Graphic design and other creative medias. Actually have my masters in Multimedia design but still can not find a job that pays close to what I make as a tech in that field.
i did work at a factory welding but now im waiting to go to college to be a mechanic :)
I work in a carpet warehouse....I cut carpet all day...I am in school getting my degree in IT/networking....I used to do pc repair on the side but I do not have the time for it anymore.
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Been doing IT for something like 9 years. Been between jobs for a while, and it's been phenomenal for my sanity. Every problem I deal with in the day is strictly my own.
I'm currently taking 100 level Info Tech System classes for a CIT major. I'm not liking all the programming, and I think i want to be on the hardware aspect of this field. Like physically setting up and managing networks and such, so I was told to look into electrical and computer engineering technology. People in my classes are getting boners over setting up 3 different OS's and messing around in VMware studio 9 or whatever that virtual program is. I'm not a big fan of that. I like to be more hands on than programming and all that logic crap. Right now i'm in this VMware clase with operating systems n virtualization, networking class, HTML Java class, and intro o algorithms and programming. Not my cup of tea.
Just make sure you learn your programming anyway. Otherwise, you'd be like a mechanic that doesn't want to learn electrical. At the very least, scripting will make your life easier at some point. I can't walk around outside without tripping over Java jobs.
Agreed! Basics like simple dos commands, visual basic... even some VBA will all be helpful. On the software side, makes software deployment much easier when pushing out via group policy, etc.
Depends on how big that spider was... they can get pretty big.
Attachment 10839 :th_gun-rockets: this bastard has to win...
slaughter house...
I just don't feel like I'd like this career. Thinkin business administration.
I work at a tool and die shop
Best Buy Sales, and going to school too :)
Spartan