Network Admins

Impact55

Platinum Member
Feb 16, 2000
2,189
3
0
Hi all! :) I think this is what I want to pursue as a career after college ( I'm a sophmore in High School now).
I have a few questions for any admins! :)

1.What are the perks and downpoints of this job?

2. What is the career outlook like? (future job availability)

3. What is the best degree to pursue in college? ( I want to go to college for sure)

4. Is it true it is moving away from Linux to Win2k?

5. How much can I expect to make? (starting salary and then later salary after a few years of experience)

Thank you! :)
 

spidey07

No Lifer
Aug 4, 2000
65,469
5
76
get a BS computer science or EE. then do what ever you want related to computers or electronics.

 

Rogue

Banned
Jan 28, 2000
5,774
0
0
Even more than college and a degree, get tons of hands-on experience with virtually every piece of Enterprise level hardware that you can. Learn about RAID arrays, server clustering/load balancing, every OS you can get your hands on (Microsoft and *nix), network equipment, routing, switching and basic to advanced programming (although basic programming is more Sys. Admin related). Stay up to date on all the latest technologies in the Enterprise market while you're attending college. Very few colleges offer a true Sys. Admin track right now. Most offer engineering and/or programming, neither of which have any real foundation in the day to day maintenance and running of an Enterprise network. Also learn the fundamentals of data storage, backup and retrieval and the other varied tasks that running a network requires. I also suggest working concurrently on a few industry certifications (CCNA, MCSE, CNE, etc.).

On the pay front, you will have to contend with generally un-qualified people who have "paper" certifications. The market has fostered and environment that has allowed too many people with too little real-world experience to get in the door and tie up otherwise great paying jobs that require much more talent than their initial "paper" certifications have granted them. I currently have no formal certification or schooling, make about $32k/yr. and manage about 500 client PCs. For the area that I work in, I'm in a middle of the road position where pay is concerned. You will most likely have to move to a major city to garner the wages that are "fabled" to exist and those generally range in the $40k-$60k range for a Systems Administrator. Be prepared to work the hours required also. Many things that you will be required to maintain and operate can typically only be serviced during low usage periods which typically fall sometime between 1am and 5am in most organizations. Hope this helps.

ps-perks are that you are god and people generally fall into two categories as a result: people who kiss your ass and people who piss you off forcing you to seek out reasons to get them fired. I refer to the latter people as having "God Envy"
 

Phil21

Golden Member
Dec 4, 2000
1,015
0
0
If anything, it is moving TOWARDS linux and away from windows.

But, that wouldn't be a "network admin" that would be "systems admin" (which is me).

network admin think CCIE, and cisco routers and BGP and all that fun stuff. Systems admin think keeping apache running, or file serving, whatever.

-Phil
 

Emulex

Diamond Member
Jan 28, 2001
9,759
1
71
network admins - cabling,routers,switches(vlans),firewalls big big $$
nt admins - dime a dozen, manage winblows boxens :) lowest pay lowest demand
unix admins - solaris/linux, bigger bucks.

me:
Sr sys admin/noc manager. Must do all of the above, with no supervision.

worth it? Spose so, since you spend 90% of your time on the net goofing off :), get to run cool boxes for yourself (see my sig) for free, but have the responsibility when all hell breaks loose and don't get paid when you have to spend the whole weekend repairing stuff's that broken.

I'd recommend strongly to get into programming, from my perspective, or better yet, become a SQL7/Oracle DBA. Those Programmers/dba's are making the easy 6 figure salaries.

 

MrChicken

Senior member
Feb 18, 2000
844
0
0
1.What are the perks and downpoints of this job?

Good equipment: lots of slack time, cool stuff to work on.
Bad equipment: junk always breaks, boss is cheap, miserable all the time.

2. What is the career outlook like? (future job availability)

Less pay and less respect every year as newbies flood the market after failing careers in hair styling and carpet cleaning.

3. What is the best degree to pursue in college? ( I want to go to college for sure)

Law, people hate you all the same, but the pay is better and you get to sue anybody that pisses you off.

4. Is it true it is moving away from Linux to Win2k?

No, that time passed, and it is moving back to *nix OS's as M$ kills off it's customer base with ludicrous licensing schemes for XP and Office XP.


5. How much can I expect to make? (starting salary and then later salary after a few years of experience)

Depends on where you live and if you can seperate yourself from the near worthless career changers flodding the market. A good admin can make 80+ grand, but 90% of the jobs pay around half of that.