Thursday, December 27, 2018

COMPTIA TEAMS WITH SECURITY UNIVERSITY ON CYBERSECURITY - CompTIA Certifications


CompTIA, the world’s leading provider of vendor-neutral skills certifications for information technology (IT) professionals, said today is it teaming with Security University in Herndon, Va., on a cybersecurity apprenticeship program targeted at military veterans and their family members.

Security University’s Q/CyberSecurity RAP program was recently added to the Virginia GI Bill approved list. This allows military personnel, veterans and their family members to use their GI Bill education benefits to participate in the program.

The program relies on classroom instruction and stacked cybersecurity certifications and credentials focused on mastery and competency to prepare new professionals for the nation’s cyber workforce.

Four of CompTIA’s industry-leading certifications are part of the program: CompTIA Security+, CompTIA Advanced Security Practitioner, CompTIA Linux+, and CompTIA Cloud+.

“CompTIA is committed to raising awareness about the critical importance of cybersecurity and the need for a robust cybersecurity workforce,” said Joe Padin, CompTIA vice president for U.S. federal and education certification sales. “We’re pleased to team with Security University in this critical effort to bring more people into the cybersecurity workforce, and to equip them with the appropriate education, training and certifications.”

Newly published data from CyberSeek™, the leading source of actionable data on supply and demand in the nation’s cybersecurity job market, shows that U.S. employers in the private and public sectors posted an estimated 313,735 job openings for cybersecurity workers between September 2017 and August 2018.

The Washington, D.C., metropolitan area had the largest number of job openings for cybersecurity professionals (44,058). Across Virginia there were an estimated 33,530 cybersecurity job openings.

CompTIA offers a wide selection of free resources available to anyone interested in learning more about careers in the cybersecurity field.

About Security University 


Security University is the nation’s leading providers of Qualified Hands-On Cybersecurity Education, Information Assurance Training and Certifications for IT and Security Professionals.

Success Secrets: How you can Pass CompTIA Certification Exams in first attempt 



Wednesday, December 12, 2018

CompTIA Digital Badging: 5 Facts You May Not Know


You may have heard that your CompTIA certifications can now be shared as CompTIA digital badges – images and metadata offered by Credly that prove to employers that you’ve demonstrated the hands-on skills needed by today’s IT workforce. But do you know how they work, the benefits they offer and how you can get yours? Keep reading to learn more.

1. Digital Badges Are Verified Credentials.


Not just anyone can post a CompTIA digital badge to their LinkedIn profile. CompTIA digital badges are images combined with robust metadata that includes details like what the certification represents, who holds the certification (you), and how and when you earned it. CompTIA has partnered with Credly to translate the learning outcomes from your certification into the metadata that accompanies your badge. The digital badge is yours and yours alone.

The CompTIA digital badge’s metadata not only shows employers what you know, but you can use it to better explain your certifications in cover letters, interviews and more. The next time you encounter someone who hasn’t heard about your certification, you can succinctly explain it based on what you read in the metadata of your digital badge.

2. CompTIA Digital Badges Show a Deeper Mastery of Skills.


Earning multiple, related CompTIA certifications can earn you a CompTIA Stackable Certification, and with digital badging, you can efficiently show your range of expertise. CompTIA digital badges can be activated for both individual and stackable certifications. (Credly works with a number of education, training and certification bodies, so there may be other digital badges that you can activate to round out your profile.)

For example, if you have CompTIA A+, CompTIA Network+ and CompTIA Security+, you can activate those individual digital badges as well as the badge for CompTIA Secure Infrastructure Specialist. The metadata for the stackable certification will show employers the individual certifications you earned to achieve that credential and what IT skills are related to it.

3. You Decide Who Sees Your Digital Badges.


Some people like to shout their achievements from the rooftops while others prefer to keep them on a need-to-know basis. With Credly’s Acclaim platform, you decide who gets access to your CompTIA digital badges. You can easily configure your privacy settings to control what information is made public and what is kept private.

Some people might post their badges to every social media profile, their email signature and their online portfolio, while others may reserve their CompTIA digital badges for their resume only. You can use Credly’s Acclaim platform to display your digital badges, or you can download them to share on other open badge infrastructure (OBI)-compliant sites. CompTIA digital badges meet all these needs and more, so you do you. You’re in complete control.

4. CompTIA Digital Badges Help Set Your Career Path.


Identifying the next steps in your career can be challenging. When you activate your CompTIA digital badge, you’ll gain access to resources that can help you make informed decisions about your next move. Through Credly’s Acclaim platform, you can access labor market insights to search by title, location, employer or salary range for open positions related to your certification. If you find a job posting that interests you, you can apply with just a few clicks.

You’ll also receive personalized certification recommendations based on your earned credentials and special offers for additional training and certifications from CompTIA.

5. CompTIA Digital Badges Are Free! (Well, Sort Of…)


There are no additional fees associated with activating your CompTIA digital badge. Once you’ve earned your CompTIA certification, your CompTIA digital badge is an added benefit we’re providing to you, free of charge.

If you already hold a CompTIA certification or stackable certification that’s eligible for digital badging, you’ll receive an email inviting you to activate your badge. It’s a quick-and-easy process – within minutes, you can activate your badge and start sharing it.

Success Secrets: How you can Pass CompTIA Certification Exams in first attempt


Thursday, December 6, 2018

Computer Networking, IT Infrastructure and Your IT Career


From PCs to Computer Networking


I remember him trying to teach me the concept of databases, networks and how computers worked. I was already pretty savvy about how a PC worked. In fact, I would fix Dr. Snyder’s computer now and again. He had a really, really temperamental old CD tower drive. It was a huge thing – about the size of the monolith in 2001: A Space Odyssey. I remember diagnosing its problems and discovering that it had a loose connection on the back that was too expensive to fix. So, what did I do? I put a sticky note on the top of the thing that said, “Never touch this drive.” It was a fix that worked for years.

But I was worthless when it came to understanding networking and its foundations. In fact, I was pretty dismissive about the whole internet thing. After all, what’s the point of having computers communicate with each other? Isn’t that what phones are for?

When I asked him why this internet thing was a big deal, I remember how Henry decided to get all “Foundations of the Internet” on me. He trotted out a bunch of old books from the 15th, 16th and 17th centuries to get started.

I still remember the sound of the cracking of the bindings, and the smell of the old leather covers. He used these antiquarian books to show how one computer communicates with another. I remember him saying, “You know, back in the day, these books were cutting-edge technology. Now look where we are!”

Learning Computer Networking Basics


He realized I didn’t quite understand how computers talked to each other. So, he and some of his co-workers explained how they have to translate their unique MAC addresses with logical IP addresses.

He did so by explaining how the British Library has a physical address as well as a well-known name. He said that as humans, we can resolve these two things together, and computers, he said, have to do the same thing. He was very clever at analogies. I remember thinking about his analogies as I viewed files uploading across the internet at the incredibly fast pace of 36.4 Kbps. Ah, how infrastructure and networking has progressed these days!

Throughout all these mini-lessons and mini-bootcamps, Dr. Snyder and his co-workers inspired me. First, he taught me protocols such as Gopher, and Kermit, and eventually Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP), and this “new thing called the web.” He also inspired me to want to teach this stuff.

Whenever I find time, I try to do the same thing to help other folks learn about technology. The problem is, my analogies are never as good as his. Thankfully I was able to take my foundational knowledge of networking and push it to the next level.

Networking as a Foundation for Cybersecurity


A few years after I worked for Dr. Snyder, I decided to pursue networking and the internet as a career. I took the CompTIA A+ exam and the then-relatively new CompTIA Network+ exam.

I remember when I passed them – it felt so good. As I studied about networking, I thought how I now fully understood how Henry’s databases really worked and how that little office in the basement of Rivera Library at UC Riverside was able to communicate with the British Library and other sites worldwide.

Wednesday, November 28, 2018

How Cloud Computing is Revolutionizing the Way We Manage Software


The cloud computing revolution is reaching a new stage in its evolution. CompTIA’s 2018 Trends In Cloud Computing report shares that in 2018, nearly half of companies state that between 31 percent to 60 percent of their IT operations are now cloud-based.

This means that the industry discussion about cloud computing is no longer entirely about if enterprises will adopt cloud-based solutions but, rather, what value they’re getting out of them and how. So, let’s take a more detailed look at how companies and their staff are benefitting from moving applications to the cloud, and how everyone in the channel is finding their footing in this new cloud-based computing environment.

Cloud-Based Software as the Foundation for Automation  

In the first wave of cloud adoption, the main value propositions of deploying software from the cloud was reduced infrastructure costs. An SMB using a cloud-based email solution, for instance, wouldn’t need to invest in an in-house server, nor the IT staff to maintain it.

But the quality and value of cloud-deployed enterprise software packages has increased beyond this. Vendors have begun to introduce features that streamline and automate tasks in ways that leverage, and require, the cloud’s accessibility and enhanced processing power to manage. These cloud-based tools don’t just save money, they increase effectiveness. In fact 81 percent of businesses report the cloud playing some role in enhancing automation efforts.

What Types of Cloud Apps Are Trending? 

Different rankings place different cloud-based tools at the top, but you’ve doubtlessly used a SaaS tool or two in the course of doing business. Microsoft has had great success with its cloud-based iteration of its mainstay office tools, Office 365. Then there are hugely popular CRM tools like Salesforce, smart document storage solutions like Box, cross-office collaboration tools like Slack – the list goes on. What all of these tools offer is convenience, advanced opportunities for collaboration and accessibility no matter where users are physically located or what devices they are using. 

Cloud’s New World of Value-Add Opportunities 

CompTIA’s latest research on business cloud adoption points out that cloud hasn’t replaced or rendered irrelevant the third-party selling relationships long crucial to enterprise IT. There is still plenty of room for the value-added middleman in cloud relationships. MSPs in the cloud game offer consulting, maintenance, management, education, app development and other add-ons that extend the value of the vendor relationship.

Winning with Cloud-Based Solutions 

Understanding the successes that companies are having utilizing cloud-based apps, and where third parties are coming in, can help alleviate anxiety and cut through the buzz. While it may feel like a different world, good cloud-deployed software does what good enterprise software has always done – it provides the right tool for the job.

Monday, November 19, 2018

How Apprenticeships Get IT Pros Started on the Right Foot

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Long before the advent of the computer, apprenticeships were an important way of preparing aspiring tradespeople to succeed at the jobs society needed most. Imagine back when metalworking by hand was the only way to make tools. There was little room for error. Those who wanted to become blacksmiths needed someone to show them how to do things – and do them right. Apprentice blacksmiths learned not by sitting in a classroom, but by getting their hands dirty, learning the tricks of the trade and having their work guided and evaluated by someone with the breadth of knowledge garnered from a lifetime of experience.

IT may require a little less physical muscle than knocking out swords on an anvil, but it's a trade that requires a lot of mental energy, quick thinking, problem-solving skills and system-specific knowhow, some of which can best be learned on the job. And so, just like the apprentice blacksmith of the past, today's IT professional can get an unprecedented shot at job-readiness with a combination of an apprenticeship and CompTIA certification.

Apprenticeships: What Are ​Employers Looking For? 


Since its inception in 2001, cybersecurity services provider CyberDefenses has believed in the necessity of a strong cybersecurity stance for every business, organization and institution – and has sought to cultivate the skilled IT talent to make that possible. Earlier this year CyberDefenses launched its inaugural apprenticeship program with six IT pros, training them and helping them to get CompTIA certified.

Because the CyberDefenses program was bringing on apprentices as paid employees who would be working directly with clients sooner rather than later, applicants underwent a rigorous vetting process. It wasn't necessarily a matter of hard tech skills, but the capacity and desire to learn and put in the work that CyberDefenses was looking for.

Prospective apprentices had to perform  the following:
  • Display a natural interest in the world of cybersecurity and the issues surrounding it by giving a presentation on the topic of their choosing
  • Demonstrate general problem-solving skills through a non-technical route (in one instance, a Sudoku game)
  • Show, through various rounds of interviews, a willingness and desire to learn, eat, breathe and sleep cybersecurity and to work in a focused, rigorous fashion to understand the material and reach goals
  • Apprenticeships: How Do They Really Help?
  • Once they were up to speed, the six apprentices who were invited to take part in the CyberDefenses apprenticeship program were put to work securing the networks of real CyberDefenses clients overseen by their supervisors.


The hands-on, guided element of the program gave the apprentices the following types of real-world experience:

  • Seeing the types of cybersecurity problems that arise in an actual day on the job
  • Receiving guidance on how to act in response to real unfolding cybersecurity scenarios
  • Understanding how to work together with other cybersecurity professionals
  • Certifications and Apprenticeships: Two Sides of the Employment Coin


Throughout the program, apprentices studied for their CompTIA A+ Certification and CompTIA Security+ certifications and took the exams as their in-the-field responsibilities continued to increase. And they found a significant synergy between the information they were learning in their trainings and what they were seeing as they worked on client networks.

Not only did CompTIA certifications provide a foundation of knowledge for what was happening on the systems, it also gave them a basis for effective communication with their supervisors and coworkers. Learning the massive amount of tech-specific vocabulary, acronyms and the like through their IT certification training allowed the apprentices to better understand what other IT pros were saying and how to explain, clearly and concisely, what they were seeing.

CompTIA certifications test on the most current, up-to-date skills necessary to do any IT job correctly. Apprenticeships give hands-on experience, detailed training and insight into the types of real-life situations an IT pro faces every day. Combining them gives apprentices the full picture of what they need to know to thrive in an IT role.

But there are even more practical advantages that come with a successful apprenticeship.  

Apprenticeships: Supercharging Employment Opportunities


Nobody knows the specifics of a network better than someone who has worked on it, and as is the case with the first set of CyberDefenses apprentices, those who succeed in the program are shoe-ins for an ongoing cybersecurity job. After all, they're already doing the work. 

And apprenticeships that include IT certifications are likewise preparing job seekers for a role in cybersecurity with more than just the knowledge they impart. For example, IT pros who work for government agencies or contractors are required to hold certain IT certifications, and many CompTIA certifications meet those requirements. So, a CompTIA-certified apprentice is set up to take on the cybersecurity employment landscape in more ways than one.

Tuesday, November 6, 2018

CompTIA Supports 'Artificial Intelligence in Government Act'

https://www.vceexamstest.com/

WASHINGTON — CompTIA, the leading trade association for the global technology industry, released the following statement from CompTIA Executive Vice President for Public Advocacy Elizabeth Hyman regarding the introduction of the “Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Government Act” by Senators Brian Schatz, Cory Gardner, Rob Portman, and Kamala Harris.

“The proposed legislation encourages broader use of artificial intelligence technologies across the entire federal government through, among other things, development of a strategy for investing and using AI.  Such an emphasis will spur agencies to explore the potential these emerging technologies will certainly deliver to improve the vital work of the government. In addition, this legislation brings together industry and government to explore the opportunities and challenges AI presents. We applaud the leadership of Senators Schatz, Gardner, Portman and Harris.

“CompTIA supports these forward-looking efforts by lawmakers. AI offers governments and businesses an unprecedented opportunity to improve how products and services are delivered to all people. We look forward to working with Congress as they craft smart policies that support and drive America’s leadership in developing innovative technologies.”

About CompTIA

The Computing Technology Industry Association (CompTIA) is a leading voice and advocate for the $1.5 trillion U.S. information technology ecosystem; and the 11.5 million technology and business professionals who design, implement, manage, market, and safeguard the technology that powers the U.S. economy. Through education, training, certifications, advocacy, philanthropy, and market research, CompTIA is the hub for advancing the tech industry and its workforce.

Through its Advocacy arm, CompTIA champions member-driven business and IT priorities that impact all information technology companies – from small managed solutions providers and software developers to large equipment manufacturers and communications service providers. CompTIA gives eyes, ears and a voice to technology companies, informing them of policy developments – and providing the means to do something about it. 

Monday, October 22, 2018

CompTIA PenTest+ PT0-001 Certification Study Guide

How I Passed CompTIA PenTest+ PT0-001 Exam using VCEEXAMSTEST | PT0-001 Practice Test and Training Material

CompTIA PenTest+ PT0-001 | VCEEXAMSTEST

CompTIA PenTest+ is a certification for intermediate skills level cybersecurity professionals who are tasked with hands-on penetration testing to identify, exploit, report, and manage vulnerabilities on a network.

Why CompTIA PenTest+ PT0-001 Exam is different?

CompTIA PenTest+ is the only penetration testing exam taken at a Pearson VUE testing center with both hands-on, performance-based questions and multiple-choice, to ensure each candidate possesses the skills, knowledge, and ability to perform tasks on systems. PenTest+ exam also includes management skills used to plan, scope, and manage weaknesses, not just exploit them.

PenTest+ is unique because our certification requires a candidate to demonstrate the hands-on ability and knowledge to test devices in new environments such as the cloud and mobile, in addition to traditional desktops and servers.

What you'll Learn in CompTIA PenTest+ PT0-001 Certification Exam:

  • After reading this study guide you will understand how to:
  • Plan and scope penetration tests
  • Conduct passive reconnaissance
  • Perform non-technical tests to gather information
  • Conduct active reconnaissance
  • Analyze vulnerabilities
  • Penetrate networks
  • Exploit host-based vulnerabilities
  • Test applications
  • Complete post-exploit tasks
  • Analyze and report penetration test results

CompTIA Certification Pathway

CompTIA PenTest+ joins CompTIA Cybersecurity Analyst (CySA+) at the intermediate-skills level of the cybersecurity career pathway as shown below. Depending on your course of study, PenTest+ and CySA+ can be taken in any order but typically follows the skills learned in Security+. While CySA+ focuses on defense through incident detection and response, PenTest+ focuses on offense through penetration testing and vulnerability assessment.

Although the two exams teach opposing skills, they are dependent on one another. The most qualified cybersecurity professionals have both offensive and defensive skills. Earn the PenTest+ certification to grow your career within the CompTIA recommended cybersecurity career pathway.

Jobs that use CompTIA PenTest+ Certification!

  • Penetration Tester
  • Vulnerability Tester
  • Security Analyst (II)
  • Vulnerability Assessment Analyst
  • Network Security Operations
  • Application Security Vulnerability


CompTIA PenTest+ PT0-001 Exam Preparation Resource Guide

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