From: Olson Mark (molson@xxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Tue Dec 28 1999 - 11:32:58 GMT-3
That's exactly what I did and it made things alot cleaner.
However, when I got to the troubleshooting portion, the dude
took all of my diagrams except for one. Holy balls, I guess
you only get one piece of paper for $1000! I lucked out and
passed but I had to burn a little of the troubleshooting time
redocumenting some crap. So, as messy as it is, I'd make sure
you at least put 'er all on one diagram and make quick,
not-so-neat diagrams of particular protocols, etc. if needed
(with the understanding that those crappy diagrams might get
tossed when you get to troubleshooting).
But, the best thing to do would be to ask the proctor this
question before you start day one! I'm not sure if all proctors
do what was done to me.
-----Original Message-----
From: zhencai [mailto:zhencai@home.com]
Sent: Monday, December 27, 1999 4:05 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: lab diagram
Hi,
I know when doing lab test, we are asked to draw a topology diagram. I also
noticed that when you put everything, ip addresses, ipx addresses, appletalk
addresses, etc... in one paper, it's pretty messed up. I myself can't tell
which one is which. Is it possible to draw an ip diagram and then another
non-ip diagram on another paper?
Thanks a lot.
Zhen Cai
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