Draft:Christian Scholz (German Network Expert)
German Network Expert
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Christian Scholz (pseudonym: "Netzwerkonkel") is a German network engineer specializing in IT-networking.
Submission rejected on 19 April 2026 by Hammersoft (talk). The subject does not meet Wikipedia's criteria for inclusion. Rejected by Hammersoft 13 days ago. Last edited by Auric 10 days ago. |
Comment: You said it yourself; "Independent secondary sourcing remains limited in publicly indexed media." There's no way forward with this. --Hammersoft (talk) 19:49, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
Christian Scholz | |
|---|---|
| Other names | Netzwerkonkel |
| Occupation | Network engineer |
Career
Scholz works in enterprise network engineering with a focus on routing, switching, network security, IPv6, and network automation.
He has held roles in IT infrastructure, network engineering, and consulting, working on enterprise network design and implementation.
He has worked in architecture-focused roles at IT and ICT service providers in the context of enterprise networking and infrastructure projects.[1]
Certifications
Technical work
Scholz is active in enterprise network architecture and related technical domains.
He works with network virtualization and lab environments, including EVE-NG, which is used for simulating network topologies in training and testing scenarios.[3]
Publications
Community involvement
Scholz maintains a technical blog under the name "Netzwerkonkel".[3]
He has participated in webinars and technical sessions in the context of IT-Networking including topics related to network virtualization and lab environments.
In 2024, he founded the platform "certification.community", which focuses on peer exchange among candidates preparing for expert networking certifications.[6]
He has also appeared at multiple technical events in professional contexts as a speaker.
Awards
Notability considerations
Coverage of Scholz is primarily derived from technical publications, vendor-related documentation, and community-facing material. Independent secondary sourcing remains limited in publicly indexed media.
