Thanks, that's exactly. I've met some people at local Linux meet, some of them have 20 year experience, yet they don't know that if you have a problem you can write to a mailing list. The same dude, by the way, said that he doesn't like sysvinit and systemd is easier and solves these problems. Which problems, he didn't point out.
I mean, that's something normal, neither years in the field nor degree won't make you smart and experienced (years are not equal to experience) alone, something has to be inside your skull. I believe that skills should be more important in the industry. A man at our local gym once approached me (after an occasional talk about languages) and said that his small firm (well, not *his* really, he works there) needs good programmers and added that degree doesn't matter. He added that it's hard to find *good* developers and those Bachelors are not always *good*. But, of course, if a man has a paper with his name on it, saying "look, I spent four years at the university, I must be knowing something!" then it's a good thing which powers-up your portfolio. But alone a paper shouldn't be *that* important. My 0.02 Mitt _______________________________________________ Dng mailing list Dng@lists.dyne.org https://mailinglists.dyne.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/dng