Ask HN: Is it still worth doing Red Hat certs?
With all of these recent developments, and even big companies like SuSE and Oracle reprimanding Red Hat, it sounds like Red Hat has become a blemish in the opensource world.
But as a Windows sysadmin who's been struggling to break into the Linux sysadmin world (due to lack of opportunities), I've seen that most companies still seem to be asking for Red Hat certs.
I know LFCA/LFCS exists but so far I haven't come across any adverts asking for these (at least, where I live).
So the question for all you peeps is, is it worth feeding the devil and doing an RHCSA/RHCE? Or is all of this just political theater blown out of proportion, and Red Hat isn't really evil but just a regular business doing business-ey things, and nothings changed in the real world?
12 comments
[ 2.0 ms ] story [ 46.4 ms ] threadIf you are looking for employment in those sorts of places in particular I think the certs remain valuable.
I do think what IBM/RH are doing is bad for the long term health of their products. Linux distros live and die by the size and strength of their communities.
Zero-sum thinking (hey, someone else is benefiting from my efforts! That should be MINE!) betrays a lack of understanding of the kinds of network and community effects that helped make RedHat so valuable.
Who would have thought that people who just buy stuff don't care about things as much as the people who built it?
/s
This whole thing was predictable when Red Hat got sold off to IBM, and it seems to be the ever repeating cycle of American capitalism. In order for such communities to exceed the lifespans of their creators, we need foundations and non-profits to prevent hostile takeovers by VCs.
Whether that is worth it to you, given the cost of certification, is a different matter.
I carry a few certs for work related to the products I most heavily work with because they:
- help ensure our partner status with those vendors
- give customers the warm fuzzies that our people actually know what they are talking about (at least to some basic level)
Experience trumps certification every day of the week ... except when it does not - breaking into a new career path can be one of those times
Most certs show you know enough basic material to pass a moderately-low bar of competency (yes, some are far harder and/or indicate a relatively-high bar of competency ... but the initial Red Hat certs are not those))