My personal theory on this is, the typical type of troubleshooting
skills that a good sysadmin has, simply cannot be taught. It has to
do with your personality, how you were raised, your inquisitive nature,
your willingness to take risks, and so on.
The *technical* tidbits, yes, can be taught ("ok, here's how you boot a
*nix system into single user mode to begin a rescue..."), but the
above-mentioned investigative skills? You either got it, or you don't.
(My $0.02...)
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Kent C. Brodie
Department of Physiology
(and) Human and Molecular Genetics Center
Medical College of Wisconsin
[email protected] +1 414 955 8590
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