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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)SG
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2 yr. ago

  • I was already deeply discounting. I also give hardware away to friends and family (my old Synology NAS just got a new home with a friend). But for strangers to underbid so hard is fucking insulting. I am generous. I am not someone of which to take advantage.

  • I'm writing from the USA, but I work in IT and some things are pretty universal. Skills for IT is one. Things you should try to learn if you want such a job:

    Cloud software such as Google Workspace and Microsoft Office 365. Tons of companies run on these.

    Basic network troubleshooting. You should know what DNS is. You should be able to setup a networked printer and point machines to it. You should know how to point a machine at a shared network drive. You should be able to explain concepts like DHCP.

    Windows troubleshooting (most orgs are Windows-based). How to troubleshoot software by repairing or reinstalling. How to get to system files that might help fix an app by deleting them to reset the app to it's default state.

    The above will maybe help you get a foot in the door. Other things that definitely wouldn't hurt: VOIP systems, Windows Server, Active Directory, Group Policy, Microsoft Exchange, PowerShell, virtualization (VMware, Hyper-V). After that you can go down all kinds of specialization rabbit holes. I worked at a place that mostly supported architects. We had to learn how to troubleshoot CAD software and 3D rendering apps. That won't be useful most other places, however. But a lot of this can be taught at the job if you get hired as a level one tech, so don’t let that daunting list of scary sounding items frighten you away.

    I don't know if Managed Service Providers exist in the Netherlands. These are firms that do IT for small and medium businesses who can't justify having in-house IT. Getting a job at one of these will speedrun you across a lot of tech as different clients use different tools. It's a great way to get exposed to both of the dominant cloud services mentioned above. After that, try to work at a larger org with dedicated IT. It's much simpler when you only have to support a limited number of solutions.

    You can look into building a homelab. That's where you test out and learn the skills above by building your own infrastructure. There are homelab communities and YouTube channels and the like. It's a fun and addictive hobby if you enjoy these sorts of things and the feeling of accomplishment from implementing a technology that you learned on your own devices.

    Happy to answer additional questions as needed.

    Good luck!

  • I'm a fan of pfSense, myself. But other suggestions here for OSes have been reasonable. I have a netgate router feeding an eero wap with a second wap creating a bridged wifi network. Future-proofing with 10GB on a wired switch if a good idea. I got a pair of Unifi 2.5GB switches with 10GB uplink for that. The difference in performance moving large data around is massive. I have 10GB between my primary machine, the one that I run as my always-on server, and my NAS. It's awesome. Everything else is 2.5GB.

    Edit: made one bit plural

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