CyberNow Labs - now a National Cyber Group Company - was founded in 2018 by two pioneers in real-world Cybersecurity training who believed the key to succeeding in Cybersecurity was to train like a Security Operations Center (SOC) Analyst to become one.
We are the cybersecurity "un" boot camp solution to do more than pass a certification test. We offer Hands-on Training in Cybersecurity, with actual security technologies, real networks, and real attacks to hit the ground running on day one on the job that we help people secure.
Interested in learning more? We've got you covered. Each week, the #TwoBaldnNerds release episodes on what it is like to be a Cybersecurity Analyst. Hit that bell button so you don't miss out on any of our upcoming episodes.
CyberNow Labs is expensive. this is the reality in America. People taking money from the poor. Cybersecurity companies do not wanna train, so you go to bootcamps like CyberNow Labs to be broke.
I became aware of my lack of study skills over the last few years. I’m in a cyberops program in university and while I was able to achieve a 3.8gpa, my skills that I eventually had no longer served me and now I can’t get any further in the curriculum. 10 years into trying to get my bachelors and still stuck. I’m also studying to get my A+, and eventually Net+ and Sec+ since I can turn those in towards credit in my major. However, my skills are still holding me back there, too. I decided to research and am now enrolled at iCanStudy to get help-to learn how to learn. Looking forward to getting support I need to I can reach my goals. Knowing how to study and learn is so important.
My browsers: Brave, Mullvad, DuckDuckGo, Vivaldi. I primarily use Brave when I need to login to accounts, Vivaldi for general surfing and when I need to manage a lot of tabs during research (no browser beats Vivaldi in terms of tab management), and Mullvad or DuckDuckGo for other rare and random occasions.
Can't go wrong with going straight for the CompTIA Security+ certification: the HR decision makers know what it is, and studying for it will raise enough questions about the A+ and Network+ knowledge domains for students to do "just enough" studying of those topics. All of A+ and all of Network+ is too deep for your Tier 1 SOC Analyst.