Y'know, that's what I always thought a "Network Administrator" was, too. But when the company for whom I work had a job opening for a desktop support technician, we got a ton of resumes from people who listed "Network Administrator" as a job title for jobs that consisted of troubleshooting and repairing PCs-- in environments where the PCs were connected to a network. In interviews, several of these folks didn't seem to understand even basic LAN stuff (e.g. DHCP, DNS), or even know what an IP address is. To me, "Network Administrator" implies that you understand "networking" (i.e. routing, switching, the OSI model, subnetting, ethernet, etc.), but I get the impression that not everyone agrees with that definition. Maybe there should be an RFC that defines a standard for job titles (Support Technician, Network Administrator, Network Engineer, Systems Administrator, Systems Engineer, etc.). :) ~Jeff On Sunday, November 03, 2002 2:13 PM, der.hans wrote: > Network administration is routers, switches, and other networking equipment, > not desktop or server operating systems.