Hi sysadmins, I am thinking of doing a pretty drastic career change. I have 10+ years of experience in chemistry doing bioanalysis and a few years repairing breath alcohol analyzers. I have always considered messing around with electronics, networking, and computers/servers as a hobby and have been using various Linux distros as my main os for almost 20 years.
I have come to see my specialty in my line of work as a dead end. I’m pretty damn good at my job but I feel like automation is going to be taking over very soon, and I’m not that good that I think I’ll be in the top 10% that get to stick around and run the automations when the robots finally take over. So I’m considering doing a career change to IT/sysadmin.
What I’d like to know is what should I learn how to do to see if I’ll even like moving down this path? What can I set up at home, break, then fix that would give me an idea as to what the sysadmin life is really like?
I’m pretty sure I haven’t ever really done any sysadmin type work with my home setups, seeing as I build and set up services I want for myself and at the level I’m willing to put up with. For the most part I can be handed something already implemented and work within that space to keep it going and adjust it to what I want it to do or fit my set up. I can usually find my way through log files and error codes to figure out what the problem is and duckduckgo my way to a fix.
Matey. Get into any company that has linux junior positions. You already have more experiance in linux than 90% of the average (windows) Sysadmin.
For realzies now. Most will look weird at you if you ask them to edit a file in the shell or using a server VM that runs without graphical interface.
Get into a linux junior position and get started.
Learn lots and lots. After a few years moneywise you might be back your old job as experienced chemist.