Saturday, January 21, 2023

Looking For a New IT Job...

Returning to Phoenix, AZ...

Over the Christmas and New Year's Eve holiday period, I travelled from Baltimore to Phoenix, Arizona. It was my first time back in Arizona since the 2010-2013 time frame. It was like visiting Phoenix for the very first time. Moreover, it was the first time that I have seen my mother since she visited Baltimore in March 2018. It was my first time seeing my sister, her husband, and their children in nearly 10 years or so. I used to have an aunt and uncle that lived in Gaithersburg, MD. Once my uncle retired from working at the National Institute of Health, my aunt and uncle sold their home and moved to Florida.

While visiting Phoenix, I started to take a look at what IT jobs are available as well as places to live.

I suppose that the big allure for being in the Phoenix area is to be close to family. Here in Baltimore, I don't have any family. In addition, I don't have any friends outside of work. The only people that I have seen consistantly over the past five years have been all of the doctors I have visited in both Columbia, MD and at the VA Hospital in Baltimore. I lived for one year in Columbia, MD, and I can honestly say that I don't have any friends their either.

On the other hand, I rather enjoyed my two visits with Dr Evan Chung, a chiropractor here in Catonsville, MD. During my first visit with Dr Evan Chung, I discovered that we both the opening night celebration of the 2002 World Cup in Seoul, South Korea.

During the summer of 2016, I was diagnosed with Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma for the second time in two years. For the next five years, I went to Maryland Oncology Hematology and American Radiology in Columbia, Advanced Radiology in Ellicott City, the VA Hospital in downtown Baltimore, and the VA Counselling Center up in Pikesville. I have visited so many doctors' offices over the past five years that I need a moratorium or sabbatical. However, I do like going to the chiropractor.

While going through chemotherapy for the second time, there were times when having a family member available to pick me up would have been convenient, such as when I had to go in for a bone marrow biopsy. Boy, did that really did hurt.

Let's face it, my IT help desk job at the Social Security Administration isn't exactly conducive for meeting people. Since I work at the IT help desk, my job is to sit at a desk inside an office cubicle and answer phone calls non-stop for eight hours a day no matter how ridiculous the problems are.

In all honesty, I also had trouble meeting people when I lived in Reston, VA, outside of Washington, D.C., for four years. I was one of the few people at my workplace that ACTUALLY lived in Reston. I could never figure out the social scene at Reston Town Center. Since I didn't work AND live at Reston Town Center, I was an outsider.

Looking for a New IT Job...

Since I am not happy with my current job, I am starting to look for a new IT job.

My initial thought was to look for a new IT job in the Baltimore area. There is A LOT of competition in Baltimore for the IT jobs that are available. A couple of years ago, I applied to an IT job in Timonium/Cockeysville/Hunt Valley, thinking that I was a good match for the job. I was dismayed when I discovered that 200 people applied to that one job.

Since I don't have a Top Secret security clearance with a current full scope polygraph, pursuing a help desk job at Fort Meade is just a waste of time. Furthermore, I no longer have a Top Secret clearance. It's hard to believe that it has been nearly 10 years when I discovered that I no longer have a Top Secret clearance. When I do get a job offer that requires a Top Secret clearance from, say, a recruiter on LinkedIn, I just DELETE the email without any further thought. As far as I'm concerned,

As a result of not having a Top Secret security clearance anymore, my whole life has changed.

Getting back to Phoenix...

Let's face it, there are TONS of IT jobs in Maricopa County in general and in Phoenix in particular. I'm sure that some are good and some are bad. After performing a quick search for IT jobs in Phoenix on Google, it became abundantly clear that I need to figure out some method to sort out the wheat from the chaff.

Earlier this week, I went through the job openings available on USAjobs.gov, looking for any IT jobs with the Federal government in Maricopa County. There wasn't a whole lot to choose from. The only IT job openings were with the IRS with job openings located in Phoenix, Chandler, Gilbert, and Glendale. One of the IT jobs with the IRS involved getting hired at a low level, such as at GS-7, for example. Once hired, you would then be mentored to advance to a higher GS level for that job. Would I apply for that job? I probably should. Regardless of what one thinks about the IRS, that job opening is an opportunity.

On the other hand, the job openings at USAjobs.gov are feast or famine. One week, there are all kinds of job openings. Then on the following week, there's not a whole lot to even consider applying for. Recently on USAjobs.gov, I did find two GS-12 IT job vacancies at Camp Humphreys near Pyeongtaek, South Korea. Those two jobs were the kind of jobs that I wish I had both the necessary job experience and IT certifications. Make no mistake, I would return to South Korea AT THE DROP OF A HAT.

Another attraction for moving to Phoenix is that the cost of living is a lot lower that it is here in Maryland. For example, the monthly rent for my 550 square foot apartment in Catonsville costs a little more that $1,000. Each year, the rent for my apartment keeps going up even though I don't live in a fancy apartment complex. There's no weight room. There's no pool. It's not close to the Inner Harbor.

The Most Probable Scenario...

The most probable scenario for me would probably be to quit my job at SSA. I'm a contractor, so I won't be missed a whole lot. I would need to clean out my storage unit in Herndon, VA, pack everything up, and move back to Arizona. I suppose I could drive a U-Haul truck with my belongings back to Arizona. An option to consider would be to have my car shipped to Phoenix. You DO NOT want to be without a car in Phoenix.

Once there, I could see living at my mother's house in Sun City and work at a temporary IT position, while I search for a permanent IT job and a new place to live.

One item that will help tremendously in my search for a new IT job would be to pass the exam for Cisco's CCNA certification.

The demand for the A+ certification from CompTIA is really low. Everyone wants workers with the newest IT certifications.

Wednesday, December 28, 2022

Are You Ready for Some "京城音楽"?

Who or what is the Yellow Magic Orchestra?

Active in the late 1970s and early 1980s, the Yellow Magic Orchestra (YMO) is perhaps the most famous and influential rock group to originate from Japan.

Sorry, X Japan fans...

The Yellow Magic Orchestra were one of the first rock bands from Japan that attracted international interest, especially in the United States and in Britain.

When I was in high school in the mid to late 1980s in Albuquerque, New Mexico, the first time that I had ever heard of the Yellow Magic Orchestra was in a book about electronic music that I borrowed from my local public library. I had seen Tangerine Dream play at the Kiva Auditorium in Albuquerque during the summer of 1986 with a friend, so I started to get really interested in electronic music. Prior to discussing the gear required to make electronic music, the book profiled several artists that were making electronic music, such as Brian Eno, Kraftwerk, Tangerine Dream, Klaus Schulze, Vangelis, Ultravox and John Foxx, Gary Numan, The Human League, Orchestral Manoevers in the Dark (OMD), Depeche Mode, and several other British electronic pop acts of the 1980s. Near the end, there was a brief profile about the Yellow Magic Orchestra. Electronic music from Japan seemed like an interesting and exotic idea. At the time, the only artists from Japan making electronic that I could specifically name were Isao Tomita and Kitaro.

At the time, I don't remember going to any of the record stores in Albuquerque specifically looking to buy any records that I could find by the Yellow Magic Orchestra. However, I did read about the band in the book The Trouser Press Guide to New Wave Records by Ira A. Robbins. Like many people, I did see Bernardo Bertolucci's film The Last Emperor (1986), which featured YMO's Ryuichi Sakamoto co-writing the film's musical score as well play the role of the Japanese advisor to the King of Manchuria, Pu Yi, during World War II. The film's musical score won an Oscar at that year's Academy Awards. I also knew that Ryuichi Sakamoto had co-starred with David Bowie and Tom Conti in the forgotten World War II prisoner of war drama "Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence" (1983).

It wasn't until I started listening to the albums Gentlemen Take Polaroids (1980) and Tin Drum (1981) by the British art rock group Japan that I REALLY started to get interested in exploring the discography of both Ryuichi Sakamoto solo and the Yellow Magic Orchestra. From there, I also discovered the several collaborations between Ryuichi Sakamoto and Japan's David Sylvian. Additionally, I had discovered the work of British guitarist Bill Nelson at around that time. I had a bought a copy of Bill Nelson's album Vistamix (known in the U.K. as Chimera), which featured YMO's Yukihiro Takahashi on drums for several songs.

On record, the members of the band were:

The band were something of a supergroup as each of the three members had already been involved in Japanese contemporary popular music for several years as composers, producers, members of other rock groups, studio musicians, and solo artists.

  • Prior to joining YMO, Yukihiro Takahashi had been the drummer for The Sadistic Mika Band, a Japanese rock group that once was the opening act for Roxy Music during the tour for the album Siren in 1975-76.
  • After graduating from the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music with a degree in music composition, Ryuichi Sakamoto recorded and released a couple of records under his own name as well as working as a solo artist.
  • Haruomi Hosono was known as a successful producer, songwriter, studio musician, and solo artist in Japan.

After rapidly gaining enormous popularity in Japan, YMO became one of the few Japanese rock groups that began to attract the interest of audiences, musicians, and rock critics from abroad.During the late 1970s and early 1980s, YMO would go on to tour the United States, Britain, and West Germany, among other countries.In the United States, YMO even appeared on the classic TV show "Soul Train" as musical guests. On YouTube, there is even a concert video of the Yellow Magic Orchestra playing to a large audience at the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles. An image search on Google will return photos of the Yellow Magic Orchestra backstage after a concert with the likes of Japan (the band), Steve Strange and Rusty Egan of Visage, members of Ultravox (Midge Ure, Warren Cann, and Billy Currie), members of Throbbing Gristle, and Ralf Hutter and Wolfgang Flur of Kraftwerk. Those were some of the big names at the time that were using synthesizers as the main instrument.

The main instrument of choice used by YMO on their records was the synthesizer. Due to technological advancements by Japanese companies such as Yamaha, Roland, and Korg, among other companies, synthesizers became more affordable for musicians to purchase and use in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Synthesizers were no longer the exclusive domain of, say, Keith Emerson and Rick Wakeman.

Thanks to Spotify and YouTube, I no longer have to search through the record bins at several of the record stores in Albuquerque that I used to visit, such as Bach-2-Rock, Bow Wow Records, Merlin's Record Workshop, Natural Sound, Hastings, or Sound Warehouse. After listening to YMO's discography on Spotify and YouTube, I find myself wondering why did it take so long to listen to these albums. I agree with the music critic who once said if a listener does not like Kraftwerk's cold, minimalist approach to electronic music, then the listener may find YMO's electronic music to be surprisingly warm and playful.

I would agree with that statement.

However, I still really like Kraftwerk's cold minimalism.

What is 京城音楽?

The song "京城音楽" ("Seoul Music") is from YMO's album "Technodelic", which was released on November 21, 1981.

First, let's analyze the Chinese characters that are the song's title. Just as an aside, Chinese characters used in the Japanese language are known as kanji. In the Korean language, Chinese characters are known as hanja. While the use of kanji is integral in the use of the Japanese language, the use of hanja in the Korean language has substantially declined. When I lived in Seoul, the only times I can remember seeing hanja being used was in newspapers and at museums and historical sites. There was a time in Korean history when written communication was written entirely in hanja. Why the change? As it was explained to me, there is a greater emphasis in South Korean schools on learning how to communicate using hangeul rather than using hanja. I remember reading somewhere that approximately 200 to 300 hanja characters are used daily in South Korea. In North Korea, the use of hanja appears to have been dropped from the Korean language altogether.

In the English language, "京城音楽" is translated as "Seoul Music".

In Japanese, the kanji characters 京城 are pronounced as Keijo.

The city of Seoul has a long and fascinating history. Since its founding, the city of Seoul has been known by various names. During the era of the Kingdom of Baekje in Three Kingdoms era of Korean history, the city was known as Wiryeseong (위례성, 慰禮城) and Hanseong. When the city became part of the Kingdom of Koguryo, it was known as Bukhansangun. During the Goryeo era, the city was known as Namgyeong (남경; 南京). Then, when the Mongols ruled Goryeo, the city became known as Hanyangbu. During the Joseon Dynasty era, the city was alternately referred to as Hanseong (한성; 漢城) and Hanyang (한양; 漢陽). However, during the Joseon Dynasty era, the general public started to refer to the city as Seoul (서울). In Traditional Chinese, the city of Seoul is known as 漢城, which is pronounced as Hànchéng. The Korean pronunciation of the hanja characters 漢城 is Hanseong. In Simplified Chinese, the city of Seoul is known as 汉城, which is pronounced as Hànchéng. The Korean pronunciation of the Chinese characters 汉城 is Seoul.When Imperial Japan annexed the Kingdom of Korea in 1910, the city of Seoul became known as Keijo (京城). In Chinese, the kanji characters 京城 are pronounced as Jincheng, which translates as "capital city". In the Korean language, the hanja characters 京城 are pronounced as Gyeongseong. In 1946, the city reverted back to using the name Seoul (서울). In Japanese katakna, the city of Seoul is known simply as ソウル.

Lastly, the kanji characters for the word "music" are 音楽, which is pronounced as "ongaku" in Japanese. In Korean, the same characters 音楽 are pronounced as "eum-ag", which also translates to the word "music".

The song's lyrics, written by Peter Barakan, paint a picture of what visiting Seoul would have been like in the early 1980s.

In a nutshell, the 1980s were a decade of enormous political tumult and social upheaval in South Korea following the assassination of President Park Chung Hee in 1979 by the head of the Korean Central Intelligence Agency (KCIA) at an official dinner. In the wake of President Park Chung Hee's assination, Army Generals Chun Doo Hwan and Roh Tae Woo governed South Korea as a military dictatorship for most of the decade. Living in far away Albuquerque, New Mexico, at the time, I remember seeing news reports from South Korea on CNN that always seemed to contain footage of democracy protestors, riot police, water cannons, and ample amounts of CS gas. One of the major scandals of the time was the execution of 100 democracy protestors by the South Korean Army in the southwestern city of Gwangju. As if all of that wasn't enough, the threat of an invasion of South Korea by North Korea was an ever present threat. Then, somehow, Seoul hosted the 1988 Summer Olympics.

With all of that cultural background, here are Peter Barakan's lyrics to "京城音楽" ("Seoul Music") by the Yellow Magic Orchestra:

Dongdaemun.

Kimpo Airport.

An old man with a stick, in white baji chogori

With a black katsu on his head.

The taxi driver kept asking if I wanted a woman.

ハイウェイは滑走路. (The highway is the runway.)

Myongdong St. has no neon signs.

Roadside pillboxes with armed police in front.

国の花はムクゲ. (The national flower is the mukuge.)

An example of life in old Korea.

The girl wouldn't let me take her picture.

An example of life in old Korea.

The girl wouldn't let me take her picture.

An example of life in old Korea.

The girl wouldn't let me take her picture.

An example of life in old Korea.

The girl wouldn't let me take her picture.

An example of life in old Korea.

The girl wouldn't let me take her picture.

An example of life in old Korea.

(There is a curfew from midnight till 4.)

(ハイカラな明洞娘.) (Stylish Myeongdong girl.)

The girl wouldn't let me take her picture.

(From Busan you can see Tsushima.)

(The speed limit for passenger cars is 37 miles per hour)

(夜間の道路上での駐車は駐車灯を点灯すること) (Turn on the parking lights when parking on the road at night)

(Korea has air raid drill once a month)

(東京―ソウル間は約二時間) (About two hours from Tokyo to Seoul)

(People over 46 speak Japanese)

Tuesday, December 20, 2022

A Quick Blog Post...

It has been a really long time since my last post here on my blog.

Unfortunately, life keeps getting in the way.

One day a week or two ago, between phone calls for my job at the Tier 1 IT help desk for the Social Security Agency, I quickly made some notes on how to improve my blog.


 

I also performed some research on how to improve my blog via Google and Pinterest. I found some really good ideas.

There are two main obstacles that are preventing my blog from getting it in the shape that I want it to be.

  1. The first obstacle is the amount of free time that I have to dedicate to my blog.
  2. The second obstacle is perfectionism.

For the first obstacle, there just are never enough hours in a day.

For the second obstacle, I just need to do some extra planning and research for my posts, such as collecting all of the necessary URLs, any photos or graphics, videos on YouTube, and any ideas how on I want the post to look.

Another idea I had was to set deadlines for posts on my blog.

Since I am going on vacation for the next several days, I just might get around to completing some of the posts that I would like to post on my blog.

Wednesday, November 30, 2022

A Quick Update for My Blog...

Boy, it has been a couple of weeks since I last wrote a post for my blog.

I've been rather busy with work and a whole bunch of other stuff.

Hiking Updates

Back on Saturday, November 5, 2022, I went on an impromptu hike along the Waterfront Promenade at the Inner Harbor here in Baltimore, MD. As a result of that hike, there is a small list of items that I need to accomplish:

  • I NEED to upload the photos from hikes from my cell phone onto my computer.
  • I NEED to write a trail review over at the Alltrails.com website for the recent hikes I went on at Leakin Park-Gywnns Falls and the second hike I undertook at the Waterfront Promenade.
  • I NEED to either re-write and/or expand my trail reviews for the recent hikes at Leakin Park-Gwynns Falls and at the Waterfront Promenade hikes to my blog here at Blogger.
  • I NEED to add some additional photos from all of my completed hikes to my blog.
  • Another idea that occurred to me was to look for a way display all of my photos either on my blog here at Blogger or use a website such as Flickr.
  • I just accomplished making screenshots of the trail routes for my second and third hikes at Leakin Park-Gwynns Falls as well as my second hike at the Waterfront Promenade, so I need to add those to their respective pages.

Other Posts for My Blog

I also need to get cracking on all of the additonal subjects that I would like to publish to my blog.

  • For example, I need to work on my post about the movies that I saw at the Cine Core Theater in Seoul, South Korea.
  • That post will require A LOT more planning and work to get the post just how I want it.
    • Rewrite the post using the mind map that I created as a guide.
    • Get any additional photos for the movies that I saw at the Cine Core Movie Theater.
    • Get the URLs from You Tube for the videos that I want to include in the post, such trailers and music videos.
  • Another topic for my blog will be about Wendell Odom's series of blogposts about career planning for CCNA.
  • I have watched several other South Korean movies since returning to watching them after an absence of several years. I've seen some really good South Korean films as well as a couple of duds. I have quite a few ideas on how to approach the subject of movie reviews. Simply, I want to write more than just movie reviews.
  • I'm still playing Go. Using a 13x13 grid board and a two stone handicap, I managed to get as high as a 21kyu rank on The Many Faces of Go computer game on my computer.

I have high expectations for my blog. Given my knowledge about HTML, my expectations for my blog might be too high.

However, I am going to keep trying.

Eventually, I will get my blog to where I want it to be.

Tuesday, November 8, 2022

Neglecting My Blog...

It's been a while since my last update here on my blog.

Probably too long.

Lately, I have been extremely with my job at the IT Tier 1 help desk at the Social Security Administration here in the Greater Baltimore area. My job takes up A LOT of my time. Even though I work the 12:30 PM to 9:00 PM shift, occasionally I will get a phone call at 8:45 PM from a user that wants to know why they cannot log into Outlook or why they cannot connect to VPN, for example. Over the past few months, I have been getting really bad tension headaches during work. The location of my headaches never changes. It's always in the same place. Sometimes taking aspirin will neutralize the headache; sometimes it doesn't. As a result, I have to decompress for at least one hour or so.

Anyway, there are all kinds of posts that I would like to post on to my blog.

  1. Photos from Oktoberfest.
  2. Photos from my recent hikes here in Baltimore.
  3. A final version about movies that I saw at the Cine Core movie theater in Seoul, South Korea using the mind map that I created.
  4. My adventures in studying for CCNA.
  5. My adventures in looking for my next IT job.
  6. Why I am behind on my reading.
  7. A few posts about the music that I am listening to.
  8. Posts about trying to use mind maps in my daily life.
  9. Posts about me trying to learn the Law of Attraction.
  10. Posts about my computer beating me up in Go.

I am sure that I can come up with even more additional topics that I would like to add to my blog. For now, that is enough.

I want my blog to be something more than yet another blog on the internet that no one reads.

The only way to achieve the goals I have for this blog is to, er, do more blogging.

The look of my blog will get better as I get more confident with using HTML. I have an idea for creating a table on my blog, so one may show up on my blog in the near future. We'll see.

Since there are other things that I need to do, that's probably all that I will write for today.

Saturday, October 22, 2022

Windows 10: Still So Much to Learn...

Yesterday, during work, I had to sit through the mandatory one hour training class that is given every three or four months to employees that work at the Tier 1 help desk at the Social Security Administration.

One of the topics covered in the training class featured an extended discussion about how to rebuild a user's profile. When I heard that topic mentioned, I suddenly came back to life and eagerly started to take notes in my notebook.

Learning how to rebuild a user's profile in Windows 10 may sound mundane to some people in IT. However, to me, rebuilding a user's profile is something that I never learned enough to be confident in doing myself for an irate caller who wants to know why he or she cannot get back to work. Besides, in my five years working at the Tier 1 help desk, I have probably had less than a dozen phone calls where I had to rebuild a user's profile.

The instructions that were available for agents on how to rebuild a caller's Windows profile were poorly put together and difficult to follow. Looking at the document, I had the feeling that the instructions were primarily for, say, Windows Vista and/or Windows 7. In fact, when I started at SSA, most of the computers in SSA's inventory were still using Windows 7. For the present day, I would say 99.9% of the phone calls that I get are for Windows 10 issues.

After the training class was long over and it was time for me to go to lunch, I started up my LG tablet and opened my Amazon Kindle app. When I buy books to read, I usually use Google Books. However, I do own several books that require me to use the Kindle app. Why that is, I do not know. One of the books I purchased for the Kindle app was Ed Bott and Craig Stinson's massive tome Windows 10 Inside Out (4th Edition). I bought the book because I wanted to learn more about how to utilize Windows 10. When I was studying for both parts of CompTIA's exams for their A+ certification, it became apparent to me that I needed know more about the nuts and bolts about Windows 10. Like many computer users, I would use Windows to write a copy of my resume, save photographs from my camera, or to watch DVDs, for example, but that was about it.

In other words, when it came to Windows, I was still swimming in the shallow end of the pool.

The Windows 10 Inside Out book has rekindled (pun intended) my interest in learning more about Windows 10.

  • I have never used Disk Manager to make multiple partitions on a new hard drive. I have a brand new 5TB hard drive that I bought from Amazon several weeks ago. I should connect it to my Dell laptop, open Disk Manager, and practice making some partitions.
  • I have never set up a home network using Windows. Now, I should go to Chapter 13 Windows Networking and go through the steps of setting up a network on my laptop. If only to familiarize myself on how you would do such a thing.
  • Now, I never used the Event Viewer until I tried to use it for work. I really should learn more about using the various troubleshooting tools available for Windows 10 in addition to using Task Manager.
  • I should learn more about using Microsoft Edge than just how to type in URLs. There's so much more that Edge can do. That said, I still use Mozilla's Firefox and Google's Chrome.
  • I should learn more about changing personal settings in Windows 10.
  • Heck, I never used the Command Prompt to do, well, anything. That has all changed. Now, I am willing to try to use the Command Prompt as much as I can, especially for work. [Yes, I know that I probably should really learn how to use PowerShell.]

I could add more topics to the list, but I think you get my point.

Instead of banging my head against a brick wall over and over and over with CompTIA's awful Network+ certification, I should have taken the time to learn more about Windows.

In fact, I would go so far as to say that I should have taken the time to learn more about Windows prior to studying for A+.

Saturday, October 15, 2022

Job Titles and the A+ Certification...

For the past five years, I have been working as a contractor at the Tier 1 help desk for the Social Security Administration here in Baltimore, Maryland.

As a result, I am starting to look for a new job.

Between phone calls on this past Thursday, October 13, 2022, I found myself over at the CompTIA website, looking for inspiration.

Suddenly, I rediscovered the list all of the various job positions held by people who have earned the A+ certification.

The list contains 16 different job titles.

Here is the list:

  • IT Support Specialist
  • Help Desk Technician
  • Field Technician
  • Tier 1 Support Specialist
  • Desktop Support Specialist
  • Associate Network Engineer
  • Systems Support Technician
  • Junior Systems Administrator
  • Service Desk Analyst
  • Technical Support Specialist
  • Field Service Technician
  • Data Support Technician
  • Desktop Support Administrator
  • End-user Computing Technician
  • Help Desk Technician
  • System Support Specialist

Looking over the list of job titles, I can see that my current job can be classified as an IT Support Specialist, Help Desk Technician, Tier 1 Support Specialist, Help Desk Technician, or Help Desk Technician.

In other words, there are varied roles that someone with the A+ certification could fill.

In addition, there are all of the various other requirements that may be unique to each job role, such as specialized experience and other certifications.

My next step is to take this list of job titles and start performing key word searches for each job title in LinkedIn, Indeed, ZipRecruiter, and the rest.

I also need to update my resume. My job HAS NOT significantly changed in all of my five years, so that should be easy to do.

Lastly, after listing all of the various jobs that require the A+ certification, CompTIA then provided a short list of companies that hire people with the A+ certification.

Here is the list:

I would say that the list is probably too general.

However, I am sure that the idea is that there are various companies and organizations that have hired personnel with the A+ certification.

An interesting exercise would be to go each of the companies listed and see what IT-related job openings that are available at each organization.

Another thing that I have been meaning to do for some time is to have my own business cards made. You never know just who you might meet.