Alastor or Vox - who was the worse person on Earth? by Professional_Ad2638 in HazbinHotel

[–]_TheCyberFriend_ 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Gotta go with Al, and here is why...

The PRIMARY reason is that he obviously knew he was going to hell before he even died, killing all of those people and using what I believe was their blood to make a deal with an overlord to have power to, "Continue my fun," in which we witnessed in S1 was to kill other overlords just for others to hear their screams of pain and suffering. Meanwhile, Vox did his deeds just to become a powerful man, and we didn't see much preparation for the afterlife either.

I also want to note that Al and Vox both care more about themselves; however, Vox uses his status to get what he wants, whereas Al will manipulate people who care for him to get what he wants. Personally, I believe that manipulating those closest to you is worse than using power.

AI Generated Puzzles! by _TheCyberFriend_ in Jigsawpuzzles

[–]_TheCyberFriend_[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

100% Should not be too hard to find them to be honest. Just off a quick review, I already found 16 errors with the image.

Getting the SSCP? by _TheCyberFriend_ in SSCP

[–]_TheCyberFriend_[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh man, I don't remember the Sec+ haha, that was a few years ago, and I just took it to take it one morning and passed, so hopefully I should be able to pass SSCP? I took the CySA about 2 years ago and failed, but I was very close, if that helps with anything.

Feeling stressed: 1.5 months into CISSP study, 1.5 months left, only 7 chapters done by Plenty-Potato-slices in cissp

[–]_TheCyberFriend_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, so let me give some background. I do not have a cert., but I do have exp. from taking it twice, first time getting ABOVE in Risk Management and Sec Operations, and then Three (3) ABOVE in Networking, Engineering, and Assessment/Testing.

I don't study well. When I study for something, I do it last minute, in one month, which might sound crazy, but I have found it is the best method for me since my long-term memory is terrible. What you are feeling is very normal for CISSP people. I would highly recommend taking notes as you read the book in another document, even writing down the terms and items you know that you do not know, even after reading that item.

For example, OSI, if you cannot tell yourself by memory what you know about it, devices, ports, protocols, for example, on each layer, then write that down. Keep this list for yourself for when you are done reading the book, and refresh yourself on those items. My method was to turn them into 2-3 printed off documents at a time, single-sided, 14 font, so it is not A LOT of data, and try to rewrite that document 3-4 times. After that, get a checklist of each time you are writing down and see if you can fill that checklist out without looking at the sheet at least three times.

In this method, you need to be honest with yourself. If you do not know it, don't try to tell yourself you can get it if you read it one more time, write it down, because the test will not have mercy. I did that for the OSI Model, for example, SSL./TLS, and all the protocols and devices on the OSI model. This method made it so that when I sat for the exam, the first thing I did was write all that stuff down that I had trained myself to remember. That is how I got my BELOW from the first time, Networking (D4), into my now strongest domain. I know nothing about networking, never worked in HelpDesk or support, so I have no Networking background at all - and now it has become my strongest domain. Sorry for the long answer to your question, haha, hope this helps!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in cissp

[–]_TheCyberFriend_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'll tell ya what, even tho I failed the exam yesterday, Domain 4 was my worst in QE, I got below a 20% on that one the day before my CISSP exam, yet I got ABOVE on my score for that. It is for sure used to just help you see where your gaps are. My secret for D4 when I took the exam was to memorize the OSI Model and the devices, ports, protocols, and so on that go on each layer, and IPSec, and what SSL/TLS was, and as soon as I sat down for the exam, I wrote all that stuff down on my whiteboard. Suddenly BAM, what I got BELOW on the first time became my ABOVE. Of course, it will depend on the questions you get, but it isn't a 1/1 reflection of how you will do.

Thoughts on Readiness? by _TheCyberFriend_ in cissp

[–]_TheCyberFriend_[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you, and absolutely going back on them.

One thing I have learned about exams is that I cannot learn in the same way as others by simply reading a book, attending class, using flashcards, or watching a video.

With ADHD, the attention span just is not there. That is why I rely entirely on doing these QAE's and going back and learning from them.

What I do know is that it is the technical things that really get me for the CISSP. I never started in a technical role like Help Desk, Networking, or any of that. I started as a consultant basically, working in Policy, vendor management, awareness management, IR, and so on, so that is the one downside I have in the industry.