u/rizkhalifa34

▲ 20 r/azuredevops+2 crossposts

Beginner Projects/Things I can do on Azure?

Hello everyone! IT/Tech noob here working to dip his toes into the industry. I have been working on a project the past couple months that allow me access to Microsoft Enterprise Applications/Platforms such as Azure, Intune, Entra, etc. Currently done with said project but still have a few more months of access. Are there any beginner projects/excercises/things I can do on Azure or any of the applications or on the VM i have on Azure to help increase my knowledge from a practical perspective? Thank you for your time

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u/rizkhalifa34 — 3 days ago

First Homelab and Projects I can do in less than 3 months?

Hello y'all, I will coming back to my home town in a few months and staying for about 3 months with my parents to help them out with things. I have barely scratched the surface with IT/Tech with only about a 6 month contract as an IT Help Desk Tech. I have been studying for certs and want to build my skills while I hunt for another full time job. I currently only work/have a laptop BUT back home, I have a whole gaming pc set up that I would love to use/convert for projects/sandboxing/testing projects

specs

  • windows 11
  • Ryzen 5600x
  • Asus b450f-gaming motherboard
  • 32gb ddr4 4000mhz
  • 1tb m.2 crucial p3
  • 2tb m.2 crucial p3
  • Radeon 6900xt merc 319 black edition

What would be some good ideas for projects to do/make while I am home for about 3 months to utilize my pc?

Also are there any projects or things I can do on my laptop? (Asus Tuf Gaming 15 w/ 512ssd and 16gb ram)

I apologize if I sound ignorant or if what I'm asking doesn't make sense, PURE beginner here but passionate to learn and grow knowledge, just don't know where to start since there is so much to learn. Ik if im gonna do anything or go anywhere in IT/Tech i gotta learn to be a jack of all trades and master of some. better late than never right?

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u/rizkhalifa34 — 6 days ago
▲ 2 r/it

What certs are best for my situation and goal?

^(Hello y'all, I'm fairly new to the IT/Tech Industry. I previously had a short contract job as an IT Help Desk Technician so I have a little bit of experience specifically with Microsoft Enterprise tools but essentially no other educational background in IT/Tech. I am currently working towards my A+, after A+ i am debating on aiming for the basic A+, Network+, Security+ combo or if after my A+, i should aim towards CCNA and S/4Hana Application Associate?)

^(I know regardless of what path I go, it will take time. I'm aiming mid-term for Sys Admin and long term something with SAPs (my previous director mentioned to dive/look into SAPs). I'm very very early into my IT/Tech journey and I'm looking to work towards my longterm goal now. What certs would be best, starting off to get me to my goals the most efficiently. I am also working towards building some home labs and messing around with virtualization as well. Any tips/tricks are appreciated. Thank you)

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u/rizkhalifa34 — 6 days ago
▲ 7 r/Hokkaido+1 crossposts

こんにちは、みなさん!

Hello everyone, this is my last year in Japan until my contract ends and I am lookin' to climb Mt. Rishiri around June-July this year! I've looked at some sites and done a little bit of research but I'll be doing all this solo. My japanese (in my opinion) isn't that good (jlpt 5-4), but I think I can get by (with some notes lol). Do y'all think I'll be ok?

I regularly exercise about 3-4 days a week and I'll do some cardio prep months before hand. I have some boots and even some gloves if need be. I have a rucking backpack and I'll stuff some snacks/drinks/and other stuff in there. I don't plan to camp overnight, more so just a day trip. The goal is to drive early from where I am to Wakkanai, buy a ferry ticket, boat over to Rishiri Island, find a campsite, climb up from there. I know there are two main paths, im trying to take the hard path to push myself.

That's all I got so far, is it enough? I'm tempted to just go for it, but again, my worry is that I'm doing this solo and with minimal japanese language.

Thank you for any tips/tricks/advice!

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u/rizkhalifa34 — 19 days ago