I Feel Fantastic
May. 16th, 2007 05:52 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Today was, all things considered, a very awesome day.
I decided last night that I'd skip my morning class and sleep in a bit, mostly because we had another round of interviews with potential post-graduation employers today and I wanted to be ready. Of course, I then got the urge to not sleep, as I sometimes do, so it was after 1am before I slid into bed, but I got a couple extra hours of sleep anyhow, plus took time for breakfast, so that's cool. This all on the tail of the first Thesis meeting I've had where I came away feeling good about what I was doing -- not grand, but good, like I had a handle on things.
The day went by pretty uneventfully until said interview session came around. It was once again with my favored choice of employers, a lab out in Baltimore that would get me home to Maryland. I've already interviewed with different departments and this was a new one; as I still don't have any solid offers, any additional pushes are nice.
So we go in there and there are four guys: our school's liaison, some guy for bit-level analysis, some guy for application-level analysis, and a third guy who started talking about "Information Systems Security Engineer." And I was enthralled; he said it was basically like security consulting, going in with different projects for different customers as the expert on computer security and advising them on how to get things made right so that the system or whatever comes out secure. Heavy in dealing with people, broad range of areas to deal with -- software, hardware, networking, application, putting the pieces together, everything. He mentioned being in a meeting and being the expert, having that kind o authority, and I have to admit I want to be important. When he used the phrase, "to be a ISSE you have to be a jack of all trades, master of... maybe one," I was sold.
Even more than reverse engineering and vulnerability assessment, I think this is what I want to do. Before I'd even graduated from CUA I was talking about my Great Plan which was to get an education, get some experience, and get into consulting. And they'd give me the requisite training and classes. And the best thing is that it's a skill set that would be applicable even once my scholarship commitment is paid back.
I'm psyched. I've got the guy's contact info, and he's got my resume; if I can land this job, if I end up out there doing that, I think I'd be one more step towards having the life I want. Here's hoping!
I decided last night that I'd skip my morning class and sleep in a bit, mostly because we had another round of interviews with potential post-graduation employers today and I wanted to be ready. Of course, I then got the urge to not sleep, as I sometimes do, so it was after 1am before I slid into bed, but I got a couple extra hours of sleep anyhow, plus took time for breakfast, so that's cool. This all on the tail of the first Thesis meeting I've had where I came away feeling good about what I was doing -- not grand, but good, like I had a handle on things.
The day went by pretty uneventfully until said interview session came around. It was once again with my favored choice of employers, a lab out in Baltimore that would get me home to Maryland. I've already interviewed with different departments and this was a new one; as I still don't have any solid offers, any additional pushes are nice.
So we go in there and there are four guys: our school's liaison, some guy for bit-level analysis, some guy for application-level analysis, and a third guy who started talking about "Information Systems Security Engineer." And I was enthralled; he said it was basically like security consulting, going in with different projects for different customers as the expert on computer security and advising them on how to get things made right so that the system or whatever comes out secure. Heavy in dealing with people, broad range of areas to deal with -- software, hardware, networking, application, putting the pieces together, everything. He mentioned being in a meeting and being the expert, having that kind o authority, and I have to admit I want to be important. When he used the phrase, "to be a ISSE you have to be a jack of all trades, master of... maybe one," I was sold.
Even more than reverse engineering and vulnerability assessment, I think this is what I want to do. Before I'd even graduated from CUA I was talking about my Great Plan which was to get an education, get some experience, and get into consulting. And they'd give me the requisite training and classes. And the best thing is that it's a skill set that would be applicable even once my scholarship commitment is paid back.
I'm psyched. I've got the guy's contact info, and he's got my resume; if I can land this job, if I end up out there doing that, I think I'd be one more step towards having the life I want. Here's hoping!
no subject
Date: 2007-05-17 03:06 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-05-17 04:14 am (UTC)Best wishes with the course of the Enlightened ISSE.