Part of being an expert is understanding how much you have yet to learn to perfect your given craft, thus creating the situation where you think you are not an expert based on the things left to learn. Which is constantly changing with the technological advances in todays society.
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Nobody is as good as they think they are and as bad as other people tell them they are. In my 35 years of computer support, I have repaired over 40,000 computers and 10,000 printers of all kinds - ranging from desktops to mainframes. I had to work with:
1. DOS 2. Unix 3. OS/2 4. Novel 5. Microsoft 6. Java 7. Appletalk And just about every email system devised by mankind. At one point I was considered an expert but now I don't give a crap. Its called input overload. I have one standing professional rule...Never argue with an idiot. |
Just about any monkey could do my job.
But I am a dam good monkey |
I'm going to school for what I want to do so definitely not yet but I plan to be
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If the magic 10,000 hour rule is true, then yes, at least a couple times over... but, there's so much to learn, I don't really feel like one. I had an interesting conversation with someone about whether you can be an expert in IT without having extremely deep knowledge in one area... I've never stuck with one thing long enough to know it inside and out, but have been troubleshooting problems with everything from Cobol to networking to Windows, Unix, scripting, Java, etc; for several years.
Sometimes I feel like I should specialize and become a subject matter expert in something (especially if it means never working with Windows again), but I like the variety and know quite a bit in several areas, even if it's only at an intermediate-advanced level. |
I've done the same job for 26 years, so yeah, I pretty much got it down.
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No.....but it's hard to be in this area of work because of all of the ever changing laws.
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I can rent out a boat like you wouldn't believe. Never been in one before? Give me ten minutes and you'll be an expert.
Actually you probably won't listen. Most people don't. |
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I've been sanding glory holes for 25 years now. In a few years I think I'll have it mastered.
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Usually in situations where you can receive but not send, you're using a POP3 type e-mail account. Which has separate servers for receiving mail(POP3) and sending mail(SMTP). Things are working with the server that receives mail, but not with the server that sends mail. Check with your e-mail provider to see what settings you need for the SMTP server. Including SSL authentication if needed, and port number. When you have that, get on your phone and go to Settings\Mail, Contacts, Calendars\AccountName\Account\Outgoing Mail Server. There you will enter the correct SMTP server, and any settings necessary to make it work. Usually you need SSL enabled, and not having that enabled will prevent it from working. Hope that helps. |
Yes. You could write several term papers on my Slapdickery.
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