Cyber Sherpas Community Chat 1 - Little Time Shift
Same day, new time
Same day, new time
This is Cyber Sherpas, a brand new site by Patrick Jordan that's just getting started. Things will be up and running here shortly, but you can subscribe in the meantime if you'd like to stay up to date and receive emails when new content is published!
A quick side note before I get to the meat of the post. I am not a fan of heat maps when presenting cyber risks. I’m closer to hating them than liking them. I only want to use them when absolutely necessary, like when execs insist on seeing pretty
So, you've got a history degree. Awesome! You can probably rattle off the list of Roman Emperors faster than most people can remember their Wi-Fi password. What you may not know is that your history degree is secretly a cybersecurity superpower waiting to be unlocked! Seriously. Cybersecurity isn&
We have to postpone the chat scheduled for this Saturday
The first of many - Save the Date
Want more practice questions, roll your own with a little AI help
Landing your first big job feels like navigating a digital obstacle course, right? You've got the skills, the drive, and maybe even an internship under your belt. But before a human even lays eyes on your resume, it must pass the gatekeepers of the 21st century: AI-powered resume
Honeypot networks and AI helping defenders
Some of the most common questions I’ve heard from students, IT colleagues, and friends who want to get into the field of cybersecurity, are all about how to get started. I spent a few years where I had a side gig as an SME / learning facilitator on an MIT
Kali Linux - the penetration testing framework that I recently write about as a legend among cyber tools - just got updated last week. It’s an update packed with a whole lot of cool new things. Here’s the changelog summary from Kali: The summary of the changelog since
So, you’re sitting there with a shiny new Business or Finance degree, maybe staring at a spreadsheet, and thinking, "…Wait, I kind of want to hack things now?" Or maybe not hack things per se, but, you know, protect them from being hacked. You are not alone!