I wonder if someone can help by providing me for a good training material for Administering Windows 10 in an enterprise environment.
Windows 10Windows OS
Last Comment
Apolo Victores
8/22/2022 - Mon
Cliff Galiher
WWWAAAYYYYYYYYY too broad of a question. There is literally a lifetime of experience to "managing" an environment (windows 10 enterprise or otherwise) and training alone will never prepare you for that.
If you ran a retail McDonald's restaurant, would you hire a kid out of high school and say "you're store manager, here is some training to running a business?" Of course not.
Don't get me wrong, training is good. Training is valuable. But training is valuable. But the only way to answer this question is to know the environment, and that comes from experience. There is a reason future doctors have to work as interns and not just have school training. Or lawyers work their way up and don't just go and start their own named lawfirm straight out of lawschool. The *best* training for administering any type of network is "on the job" training.
If you are looking to get your foot in the door for a helpdesk position to get that on-the-job experience then studying for a certification such as MCSA would be a good start. Plenty of good training materials for that, all ranked on Amazon or similar, for you to find what best fits your learning style.
Apolo Victores
ASKER
Hey Cliff!! you are absolutely right!!,, I apologize for not explaining myself better. I do have the expertise and knowledge, I am working for a global company and we are using the Windows 7 Professional and also Using Windows server 2012,, also I work with Windows 10 but it is a home edition, so I just wanted to know the new differences between Windows 10 & Windows 7, working in an enterprise environment.
If you ran a retail McDonald's restaurant, would you hire a kid out of high school and say "you're store manager, here is some training to running a business?" Of course not.
Don't get me wrong, training is good. Training is valuable. But training is valuable. But the only way to answer this question is to know the environment, and that comes from experience. There is a reason future doctors have to work as interns and not just have school training. Or lawyers work their way up and don't just go and start their own named lawfirm straight out of lawschool. The *best* training for administering any type of network is "on the job" training.
If you are looking to get your foot in the door for a helpdesk position to get that on-the-job experience then studying for a certification such as MCSA would be a good start. Plenty of good training materials for that, all ranked on Amazon or similar, for you to find what best fits your learning style.