I know I'm not supposed to say this, but your High School classes don't really count/matter. But definitely STUDY and LEARN. Fix things. Break things and then fix them. |
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tell me what high school courses I'd have to take for Computer Repair/IT |
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Last edited by Yomi; 06-17-2011 at 12:50 AM. Reason: edits
I know I'm not supposed to say this, but your High School classes don't really count/matter. But definitely STUDY and LEARN. Fix things. Break things and then fix them. |
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---o--- my DCs say I'm dreamy.
if you don't mind me asking, what "sorts of cool shit" are we talking about? |
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Computer repair and IT are two very different things. Computer repair tends to be oriented towards regular consumers, ie: Windows and low to mid end hardware. IT tends to deal with enterprise computers and servers, ie: *nix, networking, and server hardware. Same concept, very different skill sets. IT is much higher skilled, and tends to get paid much better. We have three IT guys in just our US office, no repair guys at all. |
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I am a veteran, which helps. |
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Last edited by sloth; 06-17-2011 at 01:34 AM.
---o--- my DCs say I'm dreamy.
It seems you know your stuff. |
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Last edited by Yomi; 06-17-2011 at 01:37 AM. Reason: edits
---o--- my DCs say I'm dreamy.
Well right now I'm pretty much at the end of my Junior Year of High School. |
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I didn't join the military until I was like twenty one. |
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boot camp.... |
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Last edited by Yomi; 06-17-2011 at 02:06 AM. Reason: typo
Alright... here we go... |
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---o--- my DCs say I'm dreamy.
Just be extremely careful if you go the military route. You may go in hoping to sign up to learn about computers and instead end up in Iraq for the next 4 years. |
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Yes, that is the common fear, isn't it. We have an AE Air Force now. This means that you are SUPPOSEDLY only deployed for about six months, once every four years. ... Or something like that. |
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Last edited by sloth; 06-17-2011 at 12:05 PM.
---o--- my DCs say I'm dreamy.
Well, if I knew anything about the Military being careful would be easy. |
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Last edited by Yomi; 06-17-2011 at 12:43 PM. Reason: edits
If you just want to fix people's computers, just learn as much as you can, you don't even need a school. Look for some old exams from a couple of years back on University websites. If you can pass those exams, you can be a computer fixer. Just make some flyers, put them in everyone's mailbox in your area and wait for calls/e-mails. |
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I tried the flyer approach twice. I get the feeling it just doesn't work too well here. (Cumberland,RI) |
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Last edited by Yomi; 06-17-2011 at 08:46 PM. Reason: Addition
I lay new wiring. I setup new systems. I help design the way that the PCs and terminals are going to be set up. I do fix computers. I fix printers. I fix ... er.. replace switches. |
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That sounds like IT to me. I guess people do use different terms in different places. Where I work, "computer repair" is basically just a glorified virus sweeper and hardware swapper, basically... geek squad or an Apple Genius. Designing clusters is definitely IT. |
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