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CIPS Connections
Legendary and Internationally Acclaimed IT Authority Achieves Milestone This week, Stephen Ibaraki, ISP, has an
exclusive interview with the legendary Ed Tittel, recipient of the 2004 Best
Networking Professional, Career Achievement Award, from the Network
Professional Association (NPA) in cooperation with NetWorld+Interop. Ed is a
20-year world-renowned expert in training, certification, IT technologies with
over 130 books to his credit, innumerable articles, and an extensive background
in program development, senior management, speaking, teaching, editing,
consulting, and research. Discussion: Q: Ed, I wish to offer my congratulations
on your outstanding achievement in winning the highest international award in
the networking sector, the 2004 NPA Career Achievement Award presented at
NetWorld+Interop. This lifetime award for professionalism is particularly
noteworthy since the networking sector encompasses literally all of computing
from mainframes to micros, web applications, development environments,
operating systems, satellites, wireless computing, security, and the Internet.
What was your reaction and that of your family when you received the news of
this prestigious honour? How does this tie into the “words of wisdom” of your
former mentor, Dr. Brown, at the University of Texas? A: Thanks to everybody who must have voted
for me, everybody's reaction (including my own) can pretty much be summed up as
"stunned disbelief." Sometimes, one sees such things coming; this one
took all of us completely unaware. The way it ties into Dr. Brown's sage advice
is that I finally found something I could stick to and excel at, that also gave
me the variety and ability to tackle different subject matters that I craved. Q: Over your very successful career, which
achievements have given you the most satisfaction? A: You mention how many books I've worked
on in your intro. Of the 100-plus titles, a few really allowed me to repay some
intellectual debts to those from whom I learned the most. I'd put several of my
Course Technology textbooks in that category--most notably, Networking
Essentials and Guide to TCP/IP. I'm also perhaps perversely proud of
an extremely handy little flip-open reference book I conceived, designed, and
executed called The Hip Pocket Guide to HTML. I'm totally thrilled that
my concept for the Exam Cram series, born purely out of frustration at having
to haul huge, heavy study guides around in 1996 while preparing for Windows NT
4.0 exams, turned out to resonate so well with the whole IT community, with
over 300 ISBNs issued since its inception in 1997. The Pearson folks tell me
that this series is the 2nd best selling computer book series of all time (only
to …For Dummies, for which I've worked on many titles as well). Other
than that, my interest and willingness to keep learning new stuff and to help
others do the same gives me the biggest boost around. Q: What more do you hope to accomplish in
three, five, and ten years? A: I'm pretty happy where I am right now,
so in the short term I'd like to keep on keeping on, so to speak. Looking 5-10
years out, I'd like to get invited to participate in some advisory boards and
start voicing interests and concerns on behalf of the IT community in the areas
of professional education, certification, and credentials maintenance. I'd also
like to help out with some standards groups, particularly for items related to
professional development and education, and do some writing work in the public
interest, so to speak. Q: What has been your philosophy with the
best selling Que/Sams Exam Cram series and how is the book series evolving for the
future? A: Starting from the original series
concept, developed in 1996-1997, the goal has been to make delivery of
information about concepts, skills, abilities, tools, and technologies as
straightforward and direct as possible. "No fluff!" remains our
rallying cry, and we've kept seeking more ways to add value (more question
banks, better errata, more online support, and the best coverage possible) to
those books. As exams increasingly become more performance oriented—as so many
seem to be, these days—we plan to adopt simulator technology for companion
materials, and get our authors to lead students through skill- and
problem-solving drills as well as reviewing key terms, concepts, tools, and so
forth. It's an interesting challenge, and a lot of fun to keep up with this
fast-paced industry and the even faster-paced technology it uses. Q: Describe your future work with
InformIT.com and the value to working professionals. A: We do a lot of surveys on various
networking and IT subject matters, and try to help identify useful resources of
interest to practicing professionals. We revisit our work on a once to
twice-yearly basis to make sure things stay current, and we keep adding more
topics to our already sizable list. This pays off for IT professionals in lots
of ways: we try to anticipate the market to let them know where opportunities
might appear; we track trends and hot spots to tell them where they are
happening right now; and we try to cover IT certifications that offer the best
chances of enhanced employment opportunities. Q: What changes do you anticipate in your
work with TechTarget.com and Certification Magazine? A: At TechTarget, they're moving their
writers and experts into increasing interactivity with their membership: to the
articles and tips I write, they're adding quarterly Web-based lectures/chats;
in terms of answering questions and responding to concerns from members,
they're making it easier for them to make inquiries or voice issues than ever
before. It should be an interesting growth experience for all of us. As
far as Certification magazine goes, I'm getting more involved in day-to-day
news and events tracking. I'm writing a once-a-month information security
newsletter for them now, in addition to my regular contributing editor submissions.
We're working together to develop new coverage areas and departments to help IT
professionals use what they learn (or earn, when it comes to cert credentials)
more effectively on the job. Q: How have your views on certification
changed since last October 2003? A: Not very much, except to observe that a
person's ability to represent him or herself to current or prospective
employers is more important than ever. These days, it's clearly not enough to
just earn certification; it's also essential to understand its potential
benefits for employers, and to be able to explain those benefits to current or
prospective employers more or less on demand. I'm also seeing an interesting
move, both inside many certification programs and in the development of a new
class of credentials, to help IT professionals develop important soft skills
like communication, interpersonal, and management capabilities that can only
help with career and personal development, both in the short and long terms. I
also think increasing moves toward performance based testing means that
"paper credentials" will be harder to come by, and that should
hopefully increased the value attributed to hard-earned credentials by those
who earn them, and those who hire certification holders. Q: Please comment on the top four areas of
your choosing: Area 1: I've been writing a book recently
on various kinds of unwanted software—things like adware, spyware, and malware
(viruses, Trojans, worms, and so forth). I'm appalled at how pervasive this stuff
has become on the Internet and in the workplace, and I'd love to see the kinds
of changes built into our infrastructures necessary to anticipate them and to
deflect as much of that kind of stuff as possible. I'm heartened by recent
changes at Microsoft in the area of security, and hopeful that things will get
better soon, after having gotten so much worse in the past three years. But I
also hope ordinary computer users will learn and develop the skills necessary
to practice "safe computing" as well. Area 2: I'm very interested in seeing more
effective ways to use the Extensible Markup Language (XML) for all kinds of
data capture and representation. For example, as somebody who regularly works
with a protocol analyzer, I'd love to figure out a way to use XML to represent
multi-layered protocols and the data packages in which information travels at
all levels. This could help to eliminate platform or application dependencies
that get in the way of data exchange and better understanding nowadays. I can
think of other areas (EDI, security, databases, medical records, and so forth)
where significant XML-based activities are underway, and hope we can all start
realizing the benefits of that kind of thing in the next few years. Area 3: I'd like to feel like I understand
enough about Windows to really manage my own servers and desktops like I did in
the days of DOS, Windows 3.X, and early Netware (up through 3.15, let's say).
I'm not sure if that means I need to learn more about internals on many
different fronts, or if I need access to (or maybe just even knowledge about)
better tools and utilities. I keep slamming up against the limits of my own
knowledge, and I'd like to figure out a way to stretch those boundaries out a
little further. Area 4: I'm fascinated by the increasing
overlap between entertainment and sophisticated digital technology. I've been
learning more about acquiring, managing, and handling large digital music
collections, and what's involved in converting analog recordings into digital
formats. Likewise, I'm also digging into various forms of visual entertainment,
and figuring out how to bring computing and the family entertainment center
together. So far, I think Apple still beats Microsoft three ways from Sunday,
but the Media Center PC initiative and MS's willingness to keep trying until
they get it right gives me hope that ordinary people with modest budgets can
use digital entertainment technologies, manage large personal entertainment
collections, and make all the pieces and parts work without killing themselves
or going broke in the process. This is going to be one of the most interesting
life changes that most adults will have to grapple with in the next 10 years. Q: If you were to design the “perfect”
college IT program, which areas would it cover? A: These days, I don't think anybody can
claim to be educated in IT without some working knowledge of operating systems,
databases and data modeling, networking and communications, information
security, and various forms of data representation (most notably, XML). Thus,
I'd like to see programs spend two years (4 semesters) teaching the
fundamentals in all those areas, along with access to more specialized training
in the third year for interested students. I'd also like to see more emphasis on
internships or business engagements that give students the chance to see how IT
is used in the "real world" and that give them the opportunity to try
out and practice some of what they're learning in the workplace. Mind you, this
is not a computer science or computer engineering program, where emphasis on
programming languages, logic and device design, communications theory, and
various types of mathematics would be absolutely essential—this is an
undergraduate business school or liberal arts IT program that's intended to
help future IT workers master the basic subjects, skills, and abilities they'll
need to do their jobs once they go to work full-time. Q: Ed, again congratulations on your recent
Career Achievement recognition for your many remarkable contributions over a
long and very successful career! A: Thanks very much. I appreciate the
signal honor that my peers and colleagues paid to me by selecting me for the
award, and want to thank them and the NPA for their roles in the process.
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