Not to point any fingers, but there's a few "professionals" around here who
seem to have forgotten that everyone started out as an amatuer at one point
or another. I wasn't born knowing anything about electronics, and I've never
been formally taught, I've picked it all up on my own through doing it.
What little formal training in electronics I had was in HVAC school.
Otherwise I like you, am self taught. I started out at the age of 14
when I noticed the barber my mom took me to had a little repair shop in a
back room as a hobby. He taught me how to solder and some fundamental
things. At 15 I borrowed a book from the school library, Howard H.
Gerrish's Electricity and Electronics 1968 edition.I dropped out of
school at 16 because I didn't want to cut my hair to conform to their
dress code and got a job at a hotel restaurant. Back then you could do
that at that age. I did keep the Gerrish book though and still have it to
this day. That book now is 40 years old, geesh!. But it taught me about
ohms law and such. And there were some transistor projects. I have to
laugh at a picture in the book of a "marvel of modern technology" an IC
chip made by Western Electric that rests atop the eye of a needle and has
a whopping 18 transsistors on it LOL!!!!!
But to make a long story even longer I got out of the HVAC business in
1978 and was mentored in the consumer electronics industry by a person who
is a very dear friend now. He had an EE degree and took me under his wing.
As I learned on the job I eventually surpassed his expertise worked for
maybe 15 years at a warranty facility then left that to a better paying
job doing warranty work on pro audio stuff for Yamaha and eventually for
other names like Soundcraftsman, BGW, Carvin, etc.. But still I wasn't
making enough money so in 2000 I left and took a job as an IT tech with a
friend who had worked with me back in the 80's. He showed me the ropes
with NT4 and Novell servers, I had already become very knowledgeable with
Windows 98 and local area networking having had a home lan and the first
cable modem from Time Warner in NE Ohio. Needless to say my income tripled
the first year as with my salary and bonuses for hardware sales I made
nearly 80K the very first year. However health issues caught up with me
in 2004 from a leg injury in a motorcycle accident I had back in 1975 and
I just couldn't do all the walking through office and industrial complexes
so I had to retire from that and take a desk job at a NOC (network
operation center) of a friend who taught me the IT stuff. Not as much
money but still a challenge and something I can do here from home via a
VPN.
Sheesh did I just type all that shit? (Starbuck's powered this morning as
usual
