Jumping on the Rails of the Technical Train
I used to be technical, highly technical. You know the kind…more comfortable with CLI rather than GUI, limited use of CAPS at the beginning of sentences and proficient at configuring & troublesho...
Published Mar 14, 2016
Version 1.0PSilva
Technical writer, evangelist, speaker, video host, story teller and overall clever guy. Bringing the slightly theatrical and fairly technical together, I train, write, speak, along with overall evangelism. Highly technical information security professional with social media skills who has also been in such plays as The Glass Menagerie, All’s Well That Ends Well, Cinderella and others.Ret. Employee
PSilva
Technical writer, evangelist, speaker, video host, story teller and overall clever guy. Bringing the slightly theatrical and fairly technical together, I train, write, speak, along with overall evangelism. Highly technical information security professional with social media skills who has also been in such plays as The Glass Menagerie, All’s Well That Ends Well, Cinderella and others.Ret. Employee
Mike_P__194875
Nimbostratus
Apr 05, 2016I have been a network and firewall engineer for the majority of my (now 20+ year) career. In the last year I have inherited enterprise level F5's and have successfully migrated nearly 200 sites to it now, and yet I have a ton yet to learn. I am still not sure where to start so if anyone has suggestions, I am open to them. I need/want to learn more about all the nuances between ssl ciphers, http headers and especially fixing vulnerabilities that our "wonderful" web inspect team finds in our sites. Any advice out there from others who've been sent down this new rabbit hole?