To indicate basic hardware mastery, consider adding the vendor-independent A+ certification to your résumé.
        
        Making the Grade with A+
        To indicate basic hardware mastery, consider adding the vendor-independent A+ certification to your résumé.
        
        
			- By Emmett Dulaney
- March 01, 1999
Odds are good that one of the reasons youve become 
        a Microsoft Certified Professional is to stand out from 
        your peers. Now you may be seeking another certification 
        to enhance what you have. One of the best companion certifications 
        youll find is the A+, the only independent hardware 
        competency certification around. While Microsoft certifications 
        represent software mastery, with emphasis on a product 
        (Windows NT Server), the A+ certification represents a 
        hardware mastery (although one of the two exams is actually 
        software-based).
      The A+ certification is universally recognized and gives 
        you the ability to fulfill many service technician requirements 
        established by vendors like Hewlett-Packard.
      Marrying what the market perceives as a software certification 
        (the MCP title) with a hardware one helps indicate a well-rounded 
        administrator, able to see the whole picture. Also, theres 
        a good amount of overlap between information you had to 
        learn for the Networking Essentials exam and the A+ Core 
        exam. Additionally, if you took Windows 95 as an elective 
        to become a Microsoft Certified Systems Engineer (MCSE), 
        then you know a great deal of what youll need for 
        the A+ DOS/Windows elective. In short, the two certifications 
        work well together, and youll find a minimal learning 
        curve if youve already become an MCSE. 
      The Governing Body
      Whereas Microsoft is the sole vendor behind the MCP titles, 
        a number of vendors support the A+ certification under 
        the collective title of Computing Technology Industry 
        Association (CompTIA); member vendors are listed on the 
        Web site at www.comptia.org. The tests are available in 
        numerous languages around the world and administered through 
        Sylvan Prometric (800-776-4276 or www.prometric.com).
      The cost per exam is $120 for one or $215 for two (there 
        are also slight discounts if you work for a company thats 
        a member of CompTIA). You must pass the two exams within 
        90 days to become A+ certified, and many candidates choose 
        to take both on the same daythus qualifying for 
        the discount pricing. If you dont pass your second 
        exam within the 90-day period, you must retake the first 
        exam.
      As with the Microsoft exams, anyone can call, register, 
        and sit the exams. Youre not required to attend 
        any specialized training first. Youll find numerous 
        self-study routes available to you; more on that shortly. 
      
      An Overview of the Tests
      The A+ certification has been around since July 1993, 
        and over 65,000 people have become A+ certified. The tests 
        recently underwent a major overhaul to make them more 
        current, and the new exams debuted on July 31, 1998. Prior 
        to that, a candidate had to pass the Core exam and an 
        electiveeither Mac- or DOS-based. After the revisions, 
        a candidate must pass the Core exam and the new Microsoft 
        DOS/Windows exam. The Mac elective is history.
      
         
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                      | Sample 
                        Questions for the A+ Core Exam |   
                      | 1. The IRQ commonly used 
                        for the floppy drive is: 
                          2. How many pins are typically on a keyboard 
                        (choose two):5678  
                          3. Expanded memory is controlled or accessed 
                        by:56915  
                          HimemHiloadEmm386UMB  (Click here for 
                          the answers.) 
                       |  |    | 
      
      The exams ask multiple-choice questions; theyre 
        non-adaptive. Whereas Microsoft loves to use verbose questions 
        that require a great deal of reading just to ascertain 
        what the question really is, A+ questions are short and 
        straightforward (IRQ 14 is commonly used for:). 
        You can mark questions and return to them, as well as 
        use the Next and Previous buttons to navigate. The exams 
        incorporate a minimal number of exhibits. The testing 
        engine is, for all intents and purposes, identical to 
        that used for the Microsoft exams. 
      The Core Exam
      The core exam consists of 70 multiple choice questions 
        that must be answered in 60 minutes. The last seven questions 
        are on customer satisfaction and dont count in your 
        score. All told, the exam is divided into eight categories. 
        Those categories and their weight on the exam are as follows: 
      
      
         
          |  | Installation, configuration, 
            and upgrading | 30% | 
         
          |  | Diagnosing and 
            troubleshooting | 20% | 
         
          |  | Safety and preventive 
            maintenance | 10% | 
        
          |  | Motherboards/processors/memory | 10% | 
        
          |  | Printers | 10% | 
        
          |  | Portable systems | 5% | 
        
          |  | Basic networking | 5% | 
        
          |  | Customer satisfaction 
            (doesnt affect your score) | 10% | 
      
The passing score is 65 percent.
      Though the Basic Networking portion is only five percent, 
        youll find that much of the information you had 
        to study for the Networking Essentials exam (70-058) carries 
        over to this test. For the Microsoft exam, you had to 
        know different connector types (which falls into the Installation 
        section here), modems (which falls into Diagnosing here), 
        and so on.
      What youll find you must study most is the individual 
        system components: IRQs, DMAs, and I/O addresses, as well 
        as everything you can about memory and how it was configured 
        in days of old. 
      
         
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                      | Sample 
                        Questions for the DOS/Windows Exam |   
                      | 1. In DOS 6.2, the line 
                        FILES=60 should be in which 
                        file: 
                          Autoexec.batConfig.sysMSDOS.SYSIO.SYS  2. What type of multitasking is supported 
                          in Windows 3.1: 
                         
                          cooperativepreemptivereal modeprotected mode  3. What is the correct file boot sequence 
                          in Windows 95: 
                         
                          Autoexec.bat, Config.sys, Command.comConfig.sys, Autoexec.bat, Command.comCommand.com, Autoexec.bat, Config.sysConfig.sys, Command.com, Autoexec.bat 
                           (Click here for 
                          the answers.) 
                       |  |    | 
      
      The DOS/Windows Exam
      The elective exam consists of 70 multiple choice questions 
        that must be answered in 75 minutes. This exam is divided 
        into five categories; each categorys weight on the 
        exam is as follows: 
      
         
          |  | Function, structure, 
            operation, and file management | 30% | 
        
          |  | Memory management | 10% | 
        
          |  | Installation, 
            configuration, and upgrading | 25% | 
        
          |  | Diagnosing and 
            troubleshooting | 25% | 
        
          |  | Networks | 10% | 
      
The passing score is 66 percent.
      You must know plenty about MS-DOS, Windows 3.x, and Windows 
        95. If you used a Windows 95 exam (70-063 or 70-064) as 
        your client elective for the MCSE certification, you already 
        know all that you need for that portion of this exam. 
        Just go back and break out the old DOS and Windows 3.x 
        books and look at the information on file configuration. 
        Also know what utilities were included with DOS and Windows 
        3.x for defragmentation, backups, and memory management. 
      
      Getting Ready
      For this pair of tests, you can take a class, read a 
        book, or watch a video. Dozens of products have appeared 
        in the last six to nine months to help you prepare. One 
        caveat: When looking at books or other study materials, 
        make certain they reflect the exam overhaul of last July. 
        In most cases, this is spelled out on the cover or back 
        of the book. If its not quite so obvious, look at 
        the copyright date; its a safe bet that any book 
        bearing a date prior to 1998 is written to the old exams.
      I've evaluated a number of texts you can consider for 
        self-study. Heres a brief rundown: 
      
        -  A+ Certification Exam Guide 
          by Michael Meyers. Published by McGraw-Hill for $54.99 
          (ISBN 0-07913-765-2). Excellent coverage of hardware; 
          well-illustrated. Includes a CD of test questions that 
          fit in well with the text rather than being another 
          add-on.
-  A+ Certification Study Guide 
          by Syngress Media, Inc. Published by Osborne McGraw-Hill 
          for $49.99 (ISBN 0-07882-538-5). All the topics are 
          within the standard study guide format; its bundled 
          with a demo software CD. Be sure to download the errata 
          sheet from the publishers site.
-  A+ Certification Test Yourself 
          Practice Exams by Syngress Media, Inc. Published 
          by Osborne McGraw-Hill for $39.99 (ISBN 0-07211-877-6). 
          This book has no text, per se, but is a good collection 
          of questions to study in each category; answers follow 
          the exams. A good companion to any other guide, including 
          the A+ Certification Study Guide.
-  A+ Certification Test Yourself 
          Personal Testing Center, published by Osborne 
          McGraw-Hill for $129.99. This newly-released CD-based 
          software program provides lessons and practice tests. 
          (A companion package was released at the same time for 
          the MCSE track.)
-  A+ Exam Cram by Jones, 
          et al. Published by Certification Insider Press (Coriolis) 
          for $29.99 (ISBN 1-57610-251-3). To those who have used 
          the Exam Cram books for MCSE study, this format will 
          be familiar. Rather than going into excessive detail, 
          the facts you need to know for the exam are covered 
          in a concise format.
-  A+ Exam Prep by Jean Andrews. 
          Published by Certification Insider Press (Coriolis) 
          for $59.99 (ISBN 1-57610-241-6). An excellent book with 
          the information you need for the current exams, although 
          the layout of the chapters doesnt always make 
          that as clear as it could or should.
         
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                      | Other 
                        CompTIA Certifications |   
                      | The Computing Technology 
                        Industry Association currently offers 
                        three certifications: 
                          A+hardware certification.CDIACertified Document Imaging 
                            Architect.Network+formerly known as 
                            IT Skills.  As of this writing, the Network+ exam 
                          was undergoing revisions to accompany 
                          its name change; it wasnt available. Learn more about the A+ track at www.comptia.org/certification/aplus/all_about_aplus.htm.
 |  |    | 
      
      After You Pass
      
         
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                      | Answers |   
                      | 
                          A+ Core: 
                            1. B,  2. A+B,  3. C DOS/Windows: 
                            1. B,  2. A,  3. D |  |    | 
      
      When you finish the exams, you receive a printout resembling 
        the ones accompanying Microsoft exams. The report details 
        how well you did in each category, and which areas you 
        need to focus on. When youve passed both exams, 
        Sylvan Fulfillment will mail you a logo tear sheet and 
        certificate within a few weeks. You can add the A+ logo 
        to your business cards and purchase placards to display 
        at your site of business.
      If you fail either exam, you can reschedule to take it 
        at any time so long as both are passed within 90 days. 
      
      
         
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                      | More 
                        About Training |   
                      | In addition to self-study 
                        books, almost all of the vendors behind 
                        computer-based training products for MCSE 
                        exams also have A+ offerings. Vendors 
                        known to have products are listed below 
                        in alphabetic order; check their Web sites 
                        for prices and features: 
 
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