Monday, October 10, 2022

Mind Map About the Cine Core Movie Theater...

Over the past couple of months, I have been planning in my mind a rather long post about the Cine Core Movie Theater in Seoul (서울), South Korea.

While I was in the Army, I lived and worked in Seoul for the better part of 4 and a half years. Before I left Fort Hood in Texas, I heard all of the horror stories ob being stationed at Camp Casey in Tongducheon, not too far from the DMZ. I hit the jack pot. Instead of being assigned to the 2nd Infantry Division and being stationed at either Camp Casey or Camp Red Cloud, I was assigned to the 8th MP Brigade at Yongsan Garrison in the center of Seoul. 8th MP Brigade then sent me down to HHD 94th MP Battalion. In other words, I was assigned to the MP battalion stationed at Yongsan Garrison.

After staying on post for a couple of weeks, I started to leave post on the weekends and start exploring Seoul. Without any help, I figured out how to get on the subway and pretty much go whereever I wanted to go. One of the places that I found in my adventures around Seoul was the Cine Core Movie Theater located near the Jongno-3(sam)-Ga subway station. I remember seeing at least three movies at the Cine Core Movie Theater.

To cut a long story short, I am putting in A LOT of effort into making a really good post for my blog here at Blogger. A big part of my interest in returning to blogging is that I got really tired writing REALLY LONG posts on my Facebook News Feed that very few people read. With my blog, I can write as much as I want and then post a link on my Facebook News Feed.

For my post about the Cine Core Movie Theater, I used Google Maps for creating a map over lay. I used Google Slides to create a Power Point slide about the location of Cine Core Movie Theater. I even found movie posters on the internet for the movies I saw. I also used Google Docs to write my post.

Recently, I wrote a rough draft of my post on Google Docs, but I wasn't very happy with the result. At some point in the very near future, I will re-write my post. Before I will rewrite my post, I created a mind map of what I wanted to write. Since one of my personal goals is to use mindmapping more often, I created an initial mind map using a blank piece of paper and a pen. I then used a program called Wondershare MindMaster to actually create the mind map. Surprisingly, I'm actually rather pleased with my mind map. Here are the results.

Here is the top half of my mind map.

Here is the bottom half of my mind map.

My next step now is to rewrite the actual post itself. I have so much on my plate right now, but I hope to have my post about the Cine Core Movie Theater completed by the end of the week.

Tuesday, October 4, 2022

Career Planning and CCNA...

As I have mentioned in other posts, I am studying for the Cisco CCNA certification.

After getting nowhere studying for CompTIA's Network+ exam, I gave that up and switched over to studying for Cisco CCNA instead.

Right now, I just completed reading Chapter 5: Analyzing Ethernet LAN Switching in Volume 1 of the CCNA 200-301 cert guide book.

The author of the book is Wendell Odom.

Wendell Odom has a website that can be used in conjunction with both volumes of the CCNA 200-301 cert guide book. The website, Wendell Odom's CCNA Skills Blog, has a lot of really good information about studying for CCNA and networking. I should geat around to reading the supplemental material on his website for each chapter of the book.

Now that I am at Chapter 5, I will DEFINITELY take a look at what he refers to as Config Labs, which are meant to be short exercises about using the command line interface for Cisco networking equipment.

Speaking of the command line interface for Cisco networking equipment, I really should try using the exercises on Pearson Vue's network simulation tool that came with both volumes of the CCNA 200-301 cert guide book.

The Pearson Vue network simulation tool that is included with the CCNA 200-301 textbooks is meant to be an abridged version. If you want all of the exercises, you have to buy the complete version of the network simulation tool from Pearson Vue. That said, Cisco has a rather interesting program called Packet Tracer. Packet Tracer is Cisco's version of a network simulation tool. Unlike Pearson Vue's product, Packet Tracer is free from Cisco. A couple of years ago, you could freely download Packet Tracer from Cisco's website. Now, you have to create an account with Cisco IOT download Packet Tracer. Can you study for CCNA using Packet Tracer? It certainly looks like you could. I have a former co-worker at SSA's Tier 1 IT help desk who told me that he only used Packet Tracer when he studied for CCNA. Over on Amazon, I did find a book that contains 101 labs for Packet Tracer for those studying for CCNA. However, the authors assume that you already know how to use Packet Tracer.

Another interesting feature on Wendell Odom's blog is the section about career planning for networking. Thus far, I have completed the first step of six in constructing my own career plan. Like many people, I just assumed that earning the A+, Network+, and Security+ certifications was the way to go. Since I ran into a roadblock with Network+, I have had to make some adjustments. I can see earning the CCNA certification. I can also see earning Cisco's CyberOps Associate, which is Cisco's version of CompTIA's Security+ certification. Speaking of Security+, I see that ISC2 now offers their own cyber security foundations certification, which looks pretty interesting. Speaking of ISC2, the CISSP certification is rather interesting. A few years back, I had a roommate that was trying to study for the CISSP. He didn't get very far as he gave me his copy of ISC2's CISSP Study Guide. A couple of years ago at my company's Christmas party, I met a GS-12 who works in SSA's Security Operations Center. He told me that the only IT certification that he has is the CISSP. All he did, he said, was to study, study, and study for the CISSP until he could pass the exam. However, from what I can tell, the CISSP certification is meant to be an advanced level IT certification for an individual that has been working in IT for several years. Lastly, I can also see earning the certification for Microsoft's Azure, Google's Google Cloud, or Amazon's Amazon Web Services.

Career planning is a sensitive subject for me. When I graduated from New Mexico State University back in 1995 with a bachelor's degree in Economics from the College of Arts and Sciences, I didn't know what I wanted to do. No one asked. I found myself in Liberal Arts Purgatory. I was one of those people that graduated from college with no idea on what I wanted to do. If I could go back and redo college, I should have been a computer science major. When I was in the Army, I had ZERO career planning. Someone should have councelled me about giving up the dream of attending Officer Candidate School and give serious thought about what I needed to do about becoming a Warrant Officer instead. Now that I am working in Information Technology, it is very easy to get overwhelmed and frustrated with all of the various things that one can do with the various certifications that are out there. Plus, there are those IT certifications that have a high demand (CCNA, Azure, AWS, CISSP, Security+) and those that do not (A+, Server+).

For now, my main focus is to earn the CCNA certification.

My other goal is to get a new IT job. Given all of the competition here in Maryland for IT jobs, I might have to go back to Arizona and look for a new IT job out there. There are all kinds of IT jobs both in Phoenix and in the Maricopa County area. Many of those jobs do not require a security clearance. For someone that no longer has a Top Secret clearance, that is definitely music to my ears.

It's Been One Week...

Has it really been one week since the last post on my blog?

Yes, it has.

Last week, I was really busy. However, that is par for the course.

Once again, my job at the Tier 1 IT help desk at the Social Security Administration struck again, runining everything.

I am tired of expending A LOT of mental energy every day that I work at my job.

The job is just barely bearable.

For the past couple of months, I get a really bad headache. It occurs just about every afternoon. The headache always occurs in the same place: at the center top on the right side of my head.

It doesn't take too much to trigger it.

As soon as I get a caller that is having problems connecting to VPN, my headache will kick in.

This time next week, on October 2, 2022, I will have been working at the Tier 1 help desk at SSA for five years.

When I realized that I have been at the Tier 1 help desk for five years, I was shocked.

Working at the SSA Tier 1 help desk is like being on a runaway train. There is always a crisis of some sort going on when I get online.

It's always fun to have to explain what an ethernet cable does to a caller that cannot connect to VPN via wi-fi.

Is five years working at the Tier 1 help desk too long at one IT position? That's an interesting question that needs an answer.

However, on the other hand, working at the Tier 1 IT help desk at the SSA gave me a full-time job and health insurance (when I really, really needed it).

Moreover, my current job did provide me an avenue for getting IT experience.

When I think about it, I really have learned a lot.

As a result, working at the Tier 1 help desk at SSA hasn't been without its positives.

Sunday, September 18, 2022

Work and Updating My Blog...

 Yes, I know that it has been several days since the last entry on my blog.

I have not forgotten my blog.

My job at working at the Tier 1 IT help desk for the Social Security Administration has been keeping me really busy.

When I wake up in the morning, after working from 12:30 PM to 9:00 PM, I am REALLY tired.

It's not a physical tiredness, such as running 5 miles, for example, as much as it is MENTAL fatigue. While working, I can receive phone calls about IT problems that span from the very easy, such as resetting mainframe passwords, to the very complex, such as why is a network printer is offline. In addition, after 3:00 PM, I am in charge of hardware tickets, such as a request for a replacement laptop to ordering a replacement maintenance kit for an office printer, that are submitted via SSA's Tier 1 IT help desk webpage.

Depending on how many phone calls that I answer and how many hardware tickets that I have to deal with, I am mentally exhausted from about 9:00 PM, the time that I sign-out, to 10:00 PM, 11:00 PM, or 12:00 AM. I don't want to do anything except vegetate in front of my TV when I could be playing games of Go, studying for CCNA, reading the books that I have yet to complete, or writing an update on my blog.

I get that tired.

When October 2nd arrives, I will have worked at the Tier 1 IT help desk for SSA for five long years.

It's definitely time for a new IT job.

Last week, I applied for a Tier 2 IT position with Leidos. Let's see what happens next.

Possible topics for my blog include:

  • Last weekend, I made another trip to Leakin Park-Gwynns Falls. My third visit in four weeks.
  • Yesterday, I went to Das Best Oktoberfest down at the parking lot at M and T Bank stadium for the second year in a row.
  • Plus, I have a very long list of posts that I would like to add for my blog. I really need to write down a list, so I don't forget anything.

One thing I have is that I like to write, so it is time to put that skill to use.


One major benefit of writing to my blog is that I am getting re-acquainted with using HTML. A couple of years ago, when I was taking some classes at the Northern Viriginia Community College in Sterling, VA, I had to create my own website as a project for a beginning computing class. I'm sure that website is still out on the internet somewhere. If I remember correctly, NVCC is hosting that website. Anyway, as I currently write posts to my blog, I am using the HTML view. I am also using the HTML commands listed over at W3 Schools. That way, I am forced to compose posts using HTML directly instead of Blogger taking care of adding the correct HTML tags.

As a result, I will be adding HTML to my resume.

Friday, September 9, 2022

Working on My CCNA, Part 2...

 

     Over the past several days, my progress in studying for the Cisco CCNA certification has been really slow.  I'm still on Chapter 4, "Using the Command Line Interface".  As with Chapters 1-3, I keep going back through the chapter, trying to make sure that I understand all of the concepts.  After taking Cisco's online class for Packet Tracer several months ago, I have some experience with using Cisco's CLI.  In Packet Tracer, you don't have to use the CLI.  Instead, you can use the graphical user interface (GUI) to accomplish the same tasks that you would do with the CLI.  While working through Cisco's Packet Tracer course, I made the discovery that if you use the GUI to modify a switch, a router, or just about any networking device, you can switch to the CLI and see what commands you would have needed to type.  

    Once I get through Chapter 4, I can then move on to Chapter 5 and start playing around with either the Pearson Vue network simulator or try using Packet Tracer.  I also have noticed that Wendell Odom's website has a large number of free lab exercises for CCNA that can used for additional practice.

    My goal for this upcoming weekend is to complete studying Chapter 4, so I can move on to Chapter 5.   

    













Sunday, September 4, 2022

Returning to Leakin Park and Gwynns Falls...



Yesterday, I made a return visit to Leakin Park and Gwynns Falls here in Baltimore. I enjoyed my first hike at Leakin Park and Gwynns Falls, so I decided to go back two weeks later.

Instead of parking my car at the parking lot located at Windsor Mills Road and Eagle Drive, like I did last time, I parked my car over at Trailhead #1, which is located next to the Park & Ride at the beginning/ending of Interstate 70 (I-70).

From there, I followed the trail along the off-ramp to Security Blvd. before turning right onto Franklintown Road.

After that turn, I followed the trail through the small Franklintown neighborhood located right outside the park. Since I work at SSA, I have driven by the sign for Bulwinkle's Saloon countless times. It was interesting to finally see where it is located. The place looks like a dive bar with its numerous Baltimore Ravens and Oriels signs and stickers on the exterior. There was also a Harley-Davidson flag that had been raised.


 

After walking past a couple of small businesses and several houses, the asphalt trail eventually leads you into the park. In some sections, the trail can be difficult to identify. Keep a look out for green Gwynns Falls Trail signs that have been painted on the asphalt. Also, cars can speed right through Franklintwon Road despite the speed limit being posted as 25 MPH.

Suddenly, you are inside Leakin Park. The trail parallels Franklintown Road. After walking through a couple of straightaways then down through a series of switchbacks and then hiking over a bridge or two, I returned to Winan's Meadow. I could tell that I was approaching the Cardin Pavillion as I heard a DJ playing hip-hop music and the smell of meat being cooked. After walking down a couple more switchbacks, I saw that there was a large gathering of people at the Cardin Pavillion, such as a company or church group picnic.

Once I hiked to the location of Trailhead #2 near the parking lot, I had a decison to make. Was I going to cross the bridge over Dead Run onto the Stream Trail or was I going to keep following the Gwynns Park Trail?

For this occasion, I walked past the bridge for the Spring Trail and went on ahead, following the Gwynns Park Trail.

Like my previous visit Leakin Park-Gwynns Falls two weeks ago, there weren't very many people on the trail. There were long stretches of time where I was the only person on the trail, a part from a couple of deer that were looking for food to eat.

Once I crossed over the Dead Run, I kept following the Gwynns Falls Trail northward. There were a couple of deer in the bushes looking for food to eat. I could see Gwynns Falls, a small stream, on my right. As I walked north, there were a couple of bicyclists that passed me. Eventually, I reached a point where the Hutton Trail branches off to the left. The Hutton Trail eventually leads to the Carrie Murray Nature Center located in the center of Leakin Park.

Eventually, I made it to where the Gwynns Falls Trail intersects with Windsor Mill Road. At that location, I had to make a decision. Was I going to get on the Wetland Trail, which leads back into Leakin Park? Was I going to continue hiking north across Windsor Mill Road, where the trail then becomes the Dickeyvill Trail? Was I going to turn right and pass over the pedestrian bridge spanning Gwynns Falls? This week, I decided to walk across the bridge.


 

Once across the bridge, I eventually made it to another trailhead. At this trailhead, you could then explore all of the trails on the east side of Gwynns Falls. From the trail on the east side of Gwynns Falls, it is possible to follow the trail down into downtown Baltimore. Not only that, there are several other hiking trails that connect to the Gwynss Falls Trail. According to the trail map located at Winan's Meadow, the Gwynns Falls Trail has a length of 15 miles.

When I decided to take a break, drink some water, and eat a protein bar, I decided to head back to my car. According to Google Earth, I had only traveled just a little more than three miles to reach my turning around point. The hike seemed a lot longer than it really was. At various times on the hike, my left knee brace kept sliding down into my left shin, making it painful to walk at times. Knowing that I wasn't going to see everything on one trip, I headed back to the car.

I was surprised at how fast the return hike back to my car was. I must have had hiker's high. Everything was just a blur. Eventually, I just gave up on re-adjusting the velcro straps on both of my knee braces ever 100 yards or so. As I got closer to Trailhead #1, I thought about stopping by Bullwinkle's Saloon for a well-earned beer. Eventually, I gave up on that idea and continued back up the Gwynns Falls Trail to my car.

Once I made it back to Trailhead #1, I was really tired. I went right to benches at the trailhead and collapsed. I discarded any notion that I had about going over to Union Brewing or having dinner at a restaurant. Unfortunately, not this time.

When I returned back to my apartment, I realized just how out of shape that I am. Yes, I was covered in sweat. Yes, every muscle in both of my legs were sore and the soles of my feet started to hurt. I also had sore muscles in my lower and upper back. Just then I realized that this is the exact kind of workout that my lower body needs on a regular basis.  When I got back to my apartment, I should have used my foam roller, especially on my calves and quadriceps.  


 Once I got back to my car, I took a look at the statistics for my hike on my Samsung watch.  I walked 17,541 steps in 192 minutes.  I also burned 993 calories. Not too bad. Since I cannot run anymore, this is exactly the type of cardio workout that I need. 

Later on that night, one thought I had was that perhaps it's time to consider getting a new pair of hiking boots. [To be honest, I still miss the Lowa hiking boots that I wore in Afghanistan.] The Salomon hiking boots that I bought several years ago at the REI in Fairfax, VA, have been good pretty good hiking boots. For now, I will keep the Salomons.

Friday, September 2, 2022

Plans for Labor Day Weekend...

This weekend is Labor Day in the US, which means it is a three day weekend.

As a result, I am trying to plan out some things to do.

I am looking at going hiking at least twice this weekend.

  • I am going to go back to Leakin Park/Gwynns Falls. I want to do some more exploring of that area.
  • I am also planning to go back to the Inner Harbor. I want to finish walking along the Waterfront Promenade trail.

I will try to come back and update this post later today.