What is the opinion of employers about Arch, Slackware, Gentoo and Funtoo?
There is reason for to learn use Arch, Slackware, Gentoo and Funtoo if you intent is to find job?
If not, why?
If there is not reason for to learn use Arch, Slackware, Gentoo and Funtoo to find job, why use Arch, Slackware, Gentoo and Funtoo?
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Arch, Slackware, Gentoo, Funtoo, Jobs and Employers
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Re: Arch, Slackware, Gentoo, Funtoo, Jobs and Employers
Basing my answer on my own enterprise work experience, Redhat/Fedora/CentOS are probably the top ones to have in your arsenal of Linux experiences.
After that, I might venture to say Ubuntu would be the next since I think (don't hold me to that) they are involved with Amazon cloud maybe.
Again, the first three I mentioned would be in the enterprise. Smaller companies, probably not so much.
Cheers
Chris
After that, I might venture to say Ubuntu would be the next since I think (don't hold me to that) they are involved with Amazon cloud maybe.
Again, the first three I mentioned would be in the enterprise. Smaller companies, probably not so much.
Cheers
Chris
Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious
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Re: Arch, Slackware, Gentoo, Funtoo, Jobs and Employers
You will have to ask them on your next job interviewNoob_Command_Line wrote:What is the opinion of employers about Arch, Slackware, Gentoo and Funtoo?
Probably not now, but it was useful back in the day, from what I have read. These days, most jobs will require you to know your way around systemd and the modern GNU/Linux infrastructure. So, it's Red Hat/CentOS, Ubuntu and Debian.Noob_Command_Line wrote:There is reason for to learn use Arch, Slackware, Gentoo and Funtoo if you intent is to find job?
People got tired of doing things manually, so they found a way to automate most things. It's the same as in any other industry. How good/bad this is, it's the subject for another topic.Noob_Command_Line wrote:If not, why?
Lots of people like to use Arch and it's derivatives on their desktops, since it's rolling-release distro. Slackware is used for it's simplicity and transparency by a still loyal user base. Gentoo fills a niche use-case in building customized systems (like ChromeOS).Noob_Command_Line wrote:If there is not reason for to learn use Arch, Slackware, Gentoo and Funtoo to find job, why use Arch, Slackware, Gentoo and Funtoo?
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Re: Arch, Slackware, Gentoo, Funtoo, Jobs and Employers
@Wheelerof4te,Wheelerof4te wrote:You will have to ask them on your next job interviewNoob_Command_Line wrote:What is the opinion of employers about Arch, Slackware, Gentoo and Funtoo?Probably not now, but it was useful back in the day, from what I have read. These days, most jobs will require you to know your way around systemd and the modern GNU/Linux infrastructure. So, it's Red Hat/CentOS, Ubuntu and Debian.Noob_Command_Line wrote:There is reason for to learn use Arch, Slackware, Gentoo and Funtoo if you intent is to find job?People got tired of doing things manually, so they found a way to automate most things. It's the same as in any other industry. How good/bad this is, it's the subject for another topic.Noob_Command_Line wrote:If not, why?
How good/bad this is?
Re: Arch, Slackware, Gentoo, Funtoo, Jobs and Employers
Depends on where the job is located and what task etc...?
In the USA and some parts of Asia: Red Hat, Fedora, CentOS, Ubuntu, Debian
In Europe, Asia and some parts of US: SUSE/openSUSE, Ubuntu, Debian
Keep in mind that most servers/critical infrastructure that run Linux still use SysV and have no plans on switching to systemd any time soon, so knowledge of SysV and real Unix/Linux is still very important. Most satellites still run SysV and BSD inits as an example. Can you imagine a one and half minute hang time for those things?
Personally, I would suggest learning Slackware, FreeBSD, CentOS, Fedora, openSUSE and Debian in no particular order, that would cover almost any possible use case and employer demand. Also, learn how to break systems repeatedly and be able to fix them without reinstalling the OS, as that often is not an option in a job.
Time for you to fire up those virtual machines.
In the USA and some parts of Asia: Red Hat, Fedora, CentOS, Ubuntu, Debian
In Europe, Asia and some parts of US: SUSE/openSUSE, Ubuntu, Debian
Keep in mind that most servers/critical infrastructure that run Linux still use SysV and have no plans on switching to systemd any time soon, so knowledge of SysV and real Unix/Linux is still very important. Most satellites still run SysV and BSD inits as an example. Can you imagine a one and half minute hang time for those things?
Personally, I would suggest learning Slackware, FreeBSD, CentOS, Fedora, openSUSE and Debian in no particular order, that would cover almost any possible use case and employer demand. Also, learn how to break systems repeatedly and be able to fix them without reinstalling the OS, as that often is not an option in a job.
Time for you to fire up those virtual machines.