<html><body style="font-family: 'Helvetica Neue',Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif; font-size: 12px;">Hi guys. I've been perusing the list on and off for a fair few months now, and this is my first time posting here (or to any mailing list at all! Forums have spoiled us kids it seems), so please forgive me if my posting technique/etiquette is not quite right, or even if this question is not quite the scope of the list, and I'll try not to prattle on too much, but here goes...<div><br /></div><div>I'm 21, fresh out of a 12 month TAFE Networking Diploma that... could have ended better than it did, if I'm honest. Have had a few personal issues and some rather nasty illness this year, and budget and equipment cuts to my campus towards the end of the year only made things worse. I simply ran out of time.</div><div><br /></div><div>Anyway, I'm also studying a CCNA which I am about halfway through and am plugging away at at home, however my resume is quite still bare, having never had a job anywhere in I.T. before, and I'm trying to get my foot in the door. It has been suggested by a few people, some of them rather respectable in their fields, that I look at work experience or volunteering just so I can fill my resume up with *something*, and so I can gain some experience as well since it seems that even entry level mop pushing jobs require 6 months of mop pushing experience. Where do you start?</div><div><br /></div><div>But that seems to be the question wherever I turn - where do I start? How do I get my foot in the door? How do I know if that's the door I should be putting my foot into? Where is the door? Etc, etc.</div><div><br /></div><div>So I figure, based on previous advice, that I should look at work experience or volunteering my time to gain some experience. But this still presents that pesky question for me - where do I start? And another standout, what companies would allow work experience kids? I realize very well that not everyone is thrilled with the idea of a kid waltzing into their company for a couple of weeks, finding out how everything works in the pursuit of eventual employment somewhere, and this I accept, but hey, we all have to start somewhere, I guess.<br /><br />If you're still with me (I apologize for the length of this post), I think now is the time to explain the fields I'm most interested in and why.</div><div><br /></div><div>In three (or nine) words: I love networks. I love infrastructure. I love datacenters.</div><div><br /></div><div>To be a bit more verbose, I love the very concept of it. How the internet itself functions at a basic level, how complex and intricate network and telecommunications infrastructure can be, is always something that has fascinated me. I want to be at the heart of it, and yet I'm also one for details. From the NOCs to the last mile, I love it all. Perhaps I'm idealizing too much, but if you were to ask me what I see myself doing in 5 or 10 years, this paragraph is pretty much it. I love helping to set up LAN parties when I get the opportunity to do so (the infrastructure is actually quite impressive to my untrained eyes. 10Gb trunks to edge switches and 40Gb stacks between core switches - a lot of data gets shuffled around at LANs!)</div><div><br /></div><div>To be honest, I'm not even quite sure what the job description of what I eventually want to do is. But, as you can probably tell, I like big things. But I like to pay attention to the small things, too. I love the idea of overseeing the operation of datacenters or enterprise networks or telecommunications infrastructure, but also analysing and troubleshooting when things go wrong. Finding out what went wrong, why it went wrong, devising the most elegant way to fix the problem, and making sure it doesn't go wrong again. Call it morbid, but I love analysing outages (as much as I can with publicly available information) and knowing what went wrong, why, what was done to correct the problem and perhaps even what (if any) preventative measures were employed to prevent it from happening again.<br /><br />I think you get the idea at this point!</div><div><br /></div><div>I think I've droned on quite enough, but I would love to hear any and all of your suggestions as to how/where I could get my foot in the door of the networking scene, because while I would be interested in roles like sysadmin, networking seems to be where my heart is set, and always has been, really.</div><div><br /></div><div>If pertinent, I'm more than happy to link my current resume, as bare as it may be, but I did notice that the AusNOG charter said no attachments, so I'm not totally sure how the best way to go about this would be.<br /><br />Thanks for your considerable time! I look forward to hearing what you guys have to say! It's been a pleasure to read this mailing list when I can, I just hope my babbling doesn't impact on the pleasure of other readers too much. :)</div><div><br /></div><div>Thanks again,<br /><br />Rory.</div></body></html>