Well earning potential in the pure computer field in Dutchess county is
around $27-30K at best ( at this time and the foreseeable future ). I would
recommend building skills on ones you have, as a former electrician do have
contacting experience? Are you good at estimating and planning? The new
field of solar is looking for people who know electric but also have strong
technical and computer skills. There are many solar consulting and
installing firms that may need a programmer that has first hand knowledge of
a field electrician.

So blend your skills, think out of the box! and send me a $20 when you get
your new $200k job!

Joe

On Mon, May 3, 2010 at 1:16 PM, Jesse K Ziter <[email protected]> wrote:

> Eric,
>   From everything you are saying I would recommend going cisco CCNA/NP.
> There is always money in networking and the certs will get you through the
> door someplace. I dont think much else will get you to that earning
> potential without some serious experience. Once you get your foot in the
> door somewhere you can branch out and specialize. Its also a good thing to
> have under your belt for quick dollar contract gigs in times of trouble.
> That is my 2 cents for what its worth. You might want to get started by
> looking at the following sites.
>
>
> http://www.cisco.com/web/learning/le3/learning_career_certifications_and_learning_paths_home.html
>
>  http://techexams.net/cisco.shtml
>
>     Regards,
>     Jesse Z
>
>
> On Mon, May 3, 2010 at 12:48 PM, ew <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Greetings all,
>>
>> I am a displaced electrician with a yearning to learn, but also earn.
>>
>> I have zero programming skills, and only hands-on, hobby experience with
>> hardware and operating systems.  I have been using Ubuntu as my primary
>> desktop since 2007, I have configured my own server at home and have
>> since moved to VPS for our website and email.
>>
>> I am interested in opinions on what Certificate or programs that would
>> be recommended to break into the field of computing?  I don't think I am
>> suited for full time programming.  I am a real hands on type of
>> individual.  I am leaning toward networking and/or hardware specific
>> career path, perhaps an emphasis on virtualization (I think has a huge
>> future).  I don't want to take a huge pay cut.  In the past while
>> working full time I was very happy at ~80K/yr.  With the recent years
>> lack of sufficient construction projects, it's been a while since I have
>> seen such a salary.
>>
>> I understand this is a broad question, and I am expecting some broad
>> answers to help me decide on a path.
>>
>> A few questions:
>>        If you were starting over what would you do?
>>        What fields do you think will have a future demand?
>>        What resources do you recommend for accurate information?
>>        What fields will offer rewards not only monetary, but also
>> enjoyable
>> days at work?
>>
>>
>>
>> Thanks for reading and I appreciate any and all comments.
>>
>> Cheers,
>>
>> Eric
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> Mid-Hudson Valley Linux Users Group                  http://mhvlug.org
>> http://mhvlug.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mhvlug
>>
>> Upcoming Meetings (6pm - 8pm)                         MHVLS Auditorium
>>  May 5 - Crack and LLVM
>>  Jun 2 - Android
>>  Jul 7 - Patent Absurdity - The Movie
>>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Mid-Hudson Valley Linux Users Group                  http://mhvlug.org
> http://mhvlug.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mhvlug
>
> Upcoming Meetings (6pm - 8pm)                         MHVLS Auditorium
>  May 5 - Crack and LLVM
>  Jun 2 - Android
>  Jul 7 - Patent Absurdity - The Movie
>
>
_______________________________________________
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  May 5 - Crack and LLVM
  Jun 2 - Android
  Jul 7 - Patent Absurdity - The Movie

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