Sou Mizobuchi Reviewed uCertify CIW: JavaScript Specialist v2.0 Course

Sou Mizobuchi is an experienced Information Technology Specialist with a demonstrated history of working in the higher education industry. He is skilled in Development, Data Analytics, and Leadership. He is currently working as JavaScript Developer in WESEEK. He recently reviewed uCertify CIW: JavaScript Specialist v2.0 Course. Let us see what he says:

Sou Mizobuchi's Review on uCertify CIW JavaScript Specialist v2.0 Course

I admit that it was a good read and I learned a lot. The course covers broad topics of JavaScript from very basic to advanced APIs, and the content was up-to-date with the industry standard. Labs are provided in each chapter to internalize newly-learned skills which help people like me who learn by doing.

CIW: JavaScript Specialist v2.0 not only covers the syntax of JavaScript but also use cases, debugging, security, and off course XMLHttpRequest. If I had taken this course a year ago when I first started with JavaScript, I would have learned it more effectively.

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We feel really happy with such customer feedback and work with more enthusiasm for better user experience.


To know more about Sou Mizobuchi contact him via his LinkedIn profile.

Dennis Leprozo Reviewed uCertify HTML, CSS & JavaScript Web Publishing Course

Dennis Leprozo is a full-stack developer skilled in using JavaScript, React, HTML, ES6, and CSS for front-end development. He is proficient in PostgreSQL, SQL Tabs, RESTful APIs, and GitHub for repositories and has knowledge of using Digital Ocean Hosting and other tools, libraries and frameworks. He has 10+ years of work experience. Recently he accessed our HTML, CSS & JavaScript Web Publishing course. We feel happy to share his review with our users:

Dennis Reviewed uCertify's HTML, CSS & JavaScript Course

uCertify offers a huge selection of online courses for beginners, masters and intermediate like me. The course prepares you to publish your own website using new tools and guided technical details. It will help you create an interactive web page from scratch until hosting with search engine optimization and mobile responsiveness. This is a good book for computer enthusiasts who want to have a career change in web development. I had so much fun learning with uCertify.

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Thank you, Dennis, for your feedback. We are delighted that you found our course helpful.

To know more about Dennis, contact him via his LinkedIn Profile.

Dennis Mazvimba Reviewed uCertify CISA Course

Dennis Mazvimba is a passionate Network and Infrastructure Engineer possessing the ability to develop policies & procedures related to network infrastructure design, build, testing, implementation, support. He has 4+ years of experience as System Engineer. At present, he is working as Systems Administrator in Baines Imaging Group. Recently he reviewed and provided feedback on our ISACA CISA course that we are really happy to share:

ISACA CISA Course Review

uCertify made my CISA certification exam prep easy. I am writing my exams in December, and will make use of uCertify guidelines and courses. It summarizes the CISA course. Not only did this course teach me the proper techniques of exam preparation, but it also taught me how to learn independently.

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We are delighted to hear that Mr. Mazvimba had such a great experience with our course. Thank you Mr. Mazvimba for valuable feedback.

To know more about Mr. Mazvimba, contact him via his Linkedin profile.

Check out Ahmed Gad’s Feedback On uCertify Security+ Course

Ahmed Gad is a Cloud Architect, AWS, Azure and Microsoft Certified Trainer, ISO/IEC 20000, ISO/IEC 27001, ITIL Foundation, PMP, Lean, Six Sigma and Agile, Cyber Security, Linux Enterprise, DBA, MCSA, MCSE and VMware Certified with with over 5 years of experience in the IT field covering planning, installation, configuration, troubleshooting, administrating, operations management and project management. He is currently working as Cloud Computing Subject Matter Expert in Fast Lane Training. He recently reviewed our CompTIA SY0-501 course and labs. Let’s see what he says:

uCertify is the one-stop training solution for over hundreds of IT certification examinations from the all major firms like Microsoft, Adobe, CompTIA, Oracle, Cisco, etc. Now going through their CompTIA Security+ SY0-501 Course and Labs I have got access to it for My Library. Enroll with uCertify CompTIA Security+ course and gain hands-on expertise in the CompTIA Security+ SY0-501 certification exam with the course and performance-based lab and enhance your skills required to installing and configuring systems to secure applications, networks, and devices; perform threat analysis and respond with appropriate mitigation techniques; participating in risk mitigation activities; and operating with an awareness of applicable policies, laws, and regulations.

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Such customer feedback delight and encourage us to work with more enthusiasm!

To know more about Ahmed Gad, contact him via his LinkedIn profile.

Three Things Your Cybersecurity Training Is Probably Lacking

These days, it’s no longer possible to deny the role your employees have in keeping your data – and your business – safe. Cybersecurity training programs are now more critical than ever. With that in mind, though, you need to ensure your own training isn’t missing the mark. Let’s talk about that.

Cybersecurity

Cybersecurity training is critical, now more than ever. You’re doubtless already aware of that – you probably even have a program in place to teach your staff the basics. And that program is probably missing quite a bit.

Fact is, most businesses seem to focus solely on the informational side of cybersecurity training. But if you want your training to be effective – if you want it to resonate with your workers – you need to take things further. You need to focus on what your training – on what most training – is missing.

An Understanding of Social Engineering

Phishing is one of the most common cyber attack tactics for a reason – it works. It doesn’t take much for even a well-informed person to fall victim to a phishing email, either. Stress-based carelessness and simple fatigue impact us all at one point or another.

Security awareness education and training simply aren’t enough to mitigate this threat. Sure, teaching people about some of the common tactics used by scammers can help them better recognize the signs that they’re being targeted. But at the same time, it won’t address the incaution that ultimately makes phishing successful.

Instead of solely focusing on information, your training should also focus on mindfulness – on teaching your workers to think differently and be more cautious in how they conduct themselves. This need not apply just to cybersecurity, either. Framing your exercises as a way your staff can further enrich their personal lives can go a long way towards helping them embrace it.

A Focus On Emerging Threats

The cybersecurity market is in constant flux. Every day, new threats emerge, new tactics by which hackers may attempt to compromise your organization. It’s your job to stay abreast of these threats – to pay attention to security researchers and media releases so you can better stay on top of things.

But how exactly does any of this apply to employee training programs?

Whenever a major breach occurs or a major vulnerability is revealed, discuss with your team how the target may have done things better. Keep your training material up to date with lessons that may be gleaned from those breaches.

User Engagement

Last but certainly not least, you need to make your training something employees will actually want to bother with. Establish why your training program is important – why your workers should pay attention to it. Be transparent about why security matters, and about their agency and role in keeping your business safe.

Beyond that, your goal should be to make them actually feel motivated to engage with whatever programs you’ve implemented. Create an interesting narrative that focuses less on the technical side of cyber attacks and more on stories of what happens when cyberattacks succeed. Know and understand the sort of things your staff finds interesting, and structure the narrative on that.

And of course, there’s gamification – that buzzword everyone’s on about. By offering incentives and rewards, visual aids, and entertaining activities, you can get people far more interested in your cybersecurity processes and policies than you ever could with simple information.

Closing thoughts

Too often, businesses treat cyber training as a way to simply vomit information at their staff. This rarely works. In order for your cybersecurity training programs to actually be effective, you need to go a little further. You need to focus on the above items – on exactly what you’re missing.


About the Author: Max Emelianov started HostForWeb in 2001. In his role as HostForWeb’s CEO, he focuses on teamwork and providing the best support for his customers while delivering cutting-edge web hosting services.