My boss is looking to get me some Microsoft and Cisco certifications, to help with administering our local network and to prepare for some upcoming config changes with our network and some products we're installing. He's looking at Cisco stuff, I'm looking up MS stuff.
Our network is currently XP Pro desktops and laptops connecting to Win Server 2003 servers (virtualised under CentOS I believe, that's set up by head office up north). One of them is running Exchange 2007 server. My main job right now is more or less "my Outlook is playing up, come help me" tech support, although the boss is wanting us to become more autonomous from HO and for me to take more of an admin role.
My dilemna is, choosing what XP certification to get, if XP at all. Other recommendations suggest to ignore XP and just get Vista certs as "it's all the same anyway", which I think is rubbish.
My two trains of though are:
a. get the MCDST first (70-721, 70-272), then do 70-621 to upgrade that to Vista as well as Enterprise Support
b. Get Install/Config/Admin XP knowledge (70-620), then Install/Config/Admin Vista (70-620), then Enterprise Support (70-622)
...then Exchange 2007 (70-236), Office Communicator (70-638, for the CTI products we'll be installing), then MCSA/E and on from there.
Path B is a bit more direct, but I can't help but feel that the MCDST is more applicable to my current position (support and troubleshooting, rather than installing/admin). Has anyone here had experience with the MCDST or anytihng on this list, or could offer guidance at all?
And also, what is the best method of learning for these exams? Classroom courses are not applicable (regional town, no centres), so it's either textbooks or e-Learning (or TechNet, don't know a lot about that). When the textbooks are US$40ish (I'm in Australia, but it's cheaper to buy the texts over there and ship them here believe it or not), and the e-Learning courses are AU$250-400 each and about 2-3 to an exam, I can't help but wonder what I would be missing out on with the textbooks? Is the e-Learning worth the big dollars? The boss is paying, but I don't want to go to him with a $x000 expected bill and him to slam the door. Any ideas?
Our network is currently XP Pro desktops and laptops connecting to Win Server 2003 servers (virtualised under CentOS I believe, that's set up by head office up north). One of them is running Exchange 2007 server. My main job right now is more or less "my Outlook is playing up, come help me" tech support, although the boss is wanting us to become more autonomous from HO and for me to take more of an admin role.
My dilemna is, choosing what XP certification to get, if XP at all. Other recommendations suggest to ignore XP and just get Vista certs as "it's all the same anyway", which I think is rubbish.
My two trains of though are:
a. get the MCDST first (70-721, 70-272), then do 70-621 to upgrade that to Vista as well as Enterprise Support
b. Get Install/Config/Admin XP knowledge (70-620), then Install/Config/Admin Vista (70-620), then Enterprise Support (70-622)
...then Exchange 2007 (70-236), Office Communicator (70-638, for the CTI products we'll be installing), then MCSA/E and on from there.
Path B is a bit more direct, but I can't help but feel that the MCDST is more applicable to my current position (support and troubleshooting, rather than installing/admin). Has anyone here had experience with the MCDST or anytihng on this list, or could offer guidance at all?
And also, what is the best method of learning for these exams? Classroom courses are not applicable (regional town, no centres), so it's either textbooks or e-Learning (or TechNet, don't know a lot about that). When the textbooks are US$40ish (I'm in Australia, but it's cheaper to buy the texts over there and ship them here believe it or not), and the e-Learning courses are AU$250-400 each and about 2-3 to an exam, I can't help but wonder what I would be missing out on with the textbooks? Is the e-Learning worth the big dollars? The boss is paying, but I don't want to go to him with a $x000 expected bill and him to slam the door. Any ideas?