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July 21st, 2005, 07:07 AM
#11
If you want to be well off, you should try to find a corner of the security market that isn't crowded, somewhere were you can pretty much charge what you like, this gives you the option to undercut who ever is already doing this. Also, make sure it is something you enjoy, otherwise you'll be misserable.
With all the subtlety of an artillery barrage / Follow blindly, for the true path is sketchy at best. .: Bring OS X to x86!:.
Og ingen kan minnast dei linne drag i dronningas andlet den fagre dag Då landet her kvilte i heilag fred og alle hadde kjærleik å elske med.
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July 22nd, 2005, 08:37 PM
#12
Member
Getting more specific:
1st I have been around for a while but have been in generalist roles
2nd the organisation I am in appoints IT bods at random. quite literally you are doing web apps one week and IT security the next. However, having tasted the apple, I like to take more bites.
3rd I am good at project management or at least I turn everything into a project and manage it that way whether my manager thinks it is a project or not
4th I like the tech stuff but don't do detail well. i.e. I would prefer to design a system or write a guidance document for a national organisation than change a firewall configuration.
Any ideas?
No one can foresee the consequences of being clever.
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July 22nd, 2005, 09:30 PM
#13
The best advice I could give has already been said, don't specialise... and experience is very valuable to an employer, "you are doing web apps one week and IT security the next" that should be a good thing
I\'m Dying To Find Out The Hard Way
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