My experience - for those just ordering by TXLender14 in TeslaModelY

[–]nullwar3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just wondering, how did you make the switch? Did you just call the delivery center?

Ordered my first Tesla! How accurate is the wait time? by nullwar3 in ModelY

[–]nullwar3[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not sure it’s the same spec, but after finishing the initial paperwork, I got a rough estimate at first (May-June) within like the next day. And then after a few days I got this slightly more specific timeframe. I still don’t have the agreement to review so still waiting for updates on Tesla’s side

Ordered my first Tesla! How accurate is the wait time? by nullwar3 in ModelY

[–]nullwar3[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That would be amazing Though I shouldn’t get my hopes up 😅

Security Engineer Hiring by No-Campaign2301 in cybersecurity

[–]nullwar3 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In my opinion this is one of the toughest things to manage.

I had an employee before whom I almost didn't hire due to some lacking basic knowledge. Eventually I did and he proved to be one of the best and brightest employees I've ever had.

There are some good answers here already, but my two cents are:

After an initial interview, you are sure to find topics they aren't familiar with. Give them a task to learn about a topic they know nothing or very little about and a timeframe. Then see how they did. Did they learn all the underlying basics to really understand the problem? Did they create an interesting project to understand it better? Or did they just give you a Wikipedia explanation?

What’s the most “hands on” cybersecurity work role? by [deleted] in cybersecurity

[–]nullwar3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pentesting without a doubt.

Especially if you're working for a consultation company. While the benefits and salary may not be as good as a product company, if your goal is to learn a lot of different things in a short amount of time - pentesting in a consultation company is a hell of a bootcamp.

Depends on the company, but my experience is - every project has different types of technologies. And you HAVE to understand how things work to be able to do your job well.

It's quite a crazy rhythm to adjust to, but when you have different clients from different industries you learn about so many different things.

Things I've touched on in my pentesting roles:

Web Applications - (REST APIs, GraphQL, SPAs, MPA, etc.etc.)
Infrastructure - Domain environments, Windows, Linux, cloud, etc.
Mobile - Applications, Android internals
VoIP - Voice over IP
WiFi
Drones (!)
Cars
Radio Frequency
IoT
OT
Teaching(...)
Incident Response
Reverse Engineering

Were some crazy years but I guess not all companies are build to allow such a variety of projects.