Sunday 30 October 2016

Channel remains undecided on cloud, says CompTIA

CompTIA research suggests that after gobbling the cloud of dreams, the channel may be subject to buyer's remorse period


Channel companies have not yet made up their mind about where cloud computing fits your business, finding new CompTIA suggests.

Sixth annual status report channel CompTIA found that almost 40% of respondents believe that cloud computing is the main reason to be optimistic about the future of the chain.

At the same time, a third of companies surveyed said the cloud channel is one of the main concerns that made them worried about the coming days.

"The channel is still not 100% comfortable with the cloud, in fact, are less secure than they were two years ago," said Principal Carolyn April, industry analysis, CompTIA.

April, said that after a period of rapid adoption of the cloud, the channel seems to undergo a "reality check."

"As the channel has had more experience in working with the cloud, which saw the problem areas, tempered their expectations about the cost and return on investment and are now in the phase of" refinement, "" she said. "This shows that the passage of the chain to the cloud is not linear, March uniform pace, but rather a case of two steps forward and one step back."

Branches clouds go beyond capital expenditures and return on investment. There are two years, 70% of companies surveyed channel said the cloud had strengthened its relations with customers. This year, the figure dropped to 60%. And almost a quarter of companies believe that cloud ties with customers weakened, compared with 17% two years ago.

 

Despite going through a period of instability, most organizations (63%) remain optimistic that the channel has a good performance in the coming years, interesting, medium and large companies were more optimistic than their counterparts in the smaller companies.

Sunday 23 October 2016

CompTIA: School careers days have 'zero impact' on IT skills gap

One-day career days or school talks are having "zero impact" on plugging the IT skills gap, according to CompTIA's CEO Todd Thibodeaux (pictured), who said longer-term projects involving tech role models would work better.

Many technology professionals across the industry go into schools to talk up the benefits of a career in tech through larger projects or under their own steam. But Thibodeaux says the risk with this strategy is that the next day, another speaker from another industry might come in and do the same thing.

"Those things have zero impact," he told CRN today at CompTIA's EMEA member conference. "We have been doing those things forever and they have no impact at all.

"What has impact is that someone knows a friend or relative or someone they did an internship with. We've taught kids what they would be doing in a job; we've not been telling them why we love our jobs. We have to do a much better job of expressing why we love what we do. That's the part a role model plays. It's not just a one-day or a one-week thing, it's a multi-year thing. If you want kids to pay attention, you have to have constant interaction with them. It won't happen overnight, it will happen over a period of years."

He added that while it is important to introduce children to the idea of a career in IT from a young age, they are unlikely to make any concrete decisions until later on.

"Kids are delaying their career decisions into way into college or university," he said. "So the things you do in high school aged 12 to 16 years old, they're not having any impact. We should target them with long-term engagement with role models. It has to be something where at 12 or 13 they interact with a role model, over a period of years. We need to keep more top of mind over a longer period of time."

CompTIA itself has created in-school projects aimed at encouraging kids – especially girls – into tech. But Thibodeaux admitted he is sceptical about their long-term impact.

"We did Dream IT and we're questioning whether that has any ongoing value – going in and doing one or two engagements in schools," he said. "It's about how we can use that programme to have an ongoing engagement with those people."

Last month, recruiter Robertson Sumner said that as the skills gap intensifies, many resellers are looking outside the IT sector for staff, with estate agents and other sales professionals being targeted.

Thibodeaux agreed that this is a good plan, and said even non-sales workers such as hairdressers might slot well into the channel.

"Soft skills are harder to acquire so looking in other places is important – an estate agent, someone who has worked in a salon, or wherever."

Referring to hairdressers, he said: "They might have just as much aptitude and clearly they are good with their hands and have to deal with people and meet expectations. It is a high-pressure situation.

"The importance of soft skills is big. We're doing a pilot here with veterans and it is proof that in eight weeks you can take someone who has no IT knowledge and make them capable of working on a helpdesk or being a part of a technical team. Instead of looking for the traditional person who comes from a computer background and is a geek, [we need to look elsewhere]. That's the only way we can help solve the pipeline issue.

"We're not going to solve the tech skills shortage with young, white men. There are not enough of them to solve the issue. The industry is facing huge, huge retirements. We always had this big pipeline of people who wanted to work in tech and the pipeline is shrinking relative to what we need. But tech is proliferating into so many other different industries that if you want to work in tech, you don't have to work for a tech company. In the past you did."

Thursday 20 October 2016

SYO-401 Exam Question No 59

Question No 59:

An administrator discovers that many users have used their same passwords for years even though the network requires that the passwords be changed every six weeks. Which of the following, when used together, would BEST prevent users from reusing their existing password? (Select TWO).

A.
Length of password
B.
Password history
C.
Minimum password age
D.
Password expiration
E.
Password complexity
F.
Non-dictionary words

Answer: B, C