I got the A+ ... in 98 I think. One part ( of 2 ) I aced, the other I barely passed. ( did it without any prep

) At the time somebody had to have it on staff as my tiny little company did a lot of on site warranty work for Packard Bell, HP, Compaq, etc.
I don't know if it has changed but when I took it it was.... a good general test but some of the questions were out of date. They wanted you to know what the idiot lights on an external modem meant but external modems were almost never sold by then: if I hadn't been doing modem strings in the early 90's I would have had NO idea what they were talking about.
I certified pretty early: CNE in 92 or 93. a few MS ones, the CCNA 3 years ago, Citrix Metaframe two years ago. And I moderated a forum on C-Serve which called itself the Netware Professionals Association: Fore runners of todays vendor related or sponsored groups. There the topic came up at least once a week and usually the flame burners were fired up :fight :
One side feels certifications mean dick. They claim only OJT matters.
The other side feels certification means you know your stuff, show the proper attitude etc.
Actually there is a third side, but we don't yell and scream as much

:
IMSHO, Certs for someone just getting into this show some drive, shows BASIC knowledge and the ability to remember facts. For someone semi old or TRULY old like FP they show a drive/desire to stay on top. For me it is a PAIN in the butt to cram for an exam at this stage in my life. Who has time? Or the energy? But doing so allows me to learn about something new much faster than simply playing with it would do.
One other thing comes to mind: vendors require certified techs on staff often. The A+ is one such cert.. I think you have to have it to work at local computer megastores. And Microsoft required that two of us had at least one cert from them in order for me to be a MS Solution Provider.
Long winded I know. Hope it helps. Happy to ramble on further if this didn't give you the info you were after
