From: Ryan B (rbenigno@xxxxxxxx)
Date: Mon May 15 2000 - 16:49:57 GMT-3
But remember to get erasable colored pencils! Also, bring in several
different colored highlighters for routing protocol domains, etc. If you
want things to be really nice, a stencil that has oval, round and
square/rectangle cutouts plus a straight edge. Practice making the diagrams
before hand.. Every scenario I did for the two weeks leading up to my lab
got a diagram on 11" x 17" paper... When you practice it enough you get
much quicker and less prone to mistakes. Another nicety is draw a line on
each side of the paper to leave enough room to make tables containing the
addresses for each router interface.. This is *very* helpful...
-Ryan, CCIE #5847
----- Original Message -----
From: "Kinton Connelly" <kinton@oldmedia.com>
To: "Roger Wang" <rwang@genuity.net>; <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Monday, May 15, 2000 10:25 AM
Subject: RE: any last minute tips?
> At 5/15/00, Roger wrote:
> >Although there are plenty
> > > of color pens and highlighter, I found that my own for $4.95 were the
> > > best and the brightest.
> >
> >I thought we weren't allowed to bring anything into the lab?
>
> Technically, you're right - you're not supposed to bring anything into the
> lab. But I brought in a set of colored pencils and figured if the proctor
> didn't allow them, I'd just ditch them. It wasn't a problem with my
proctor
> and I have heard of and seen other people bring these in, too. You can
> always ask before you go in, just in case.
>
> I think the restriction is mainly on things that might give you an unfair
> advantage on the test - books, notes, cd's, etc.
>
> The colored pencils are a great thing to have - if you do each protocol in
> a different color, it makes your lab diagram much easier to refer to.
> Remember, you will be under intense time/lab pressure and you don't want
to
> mistakenly read your decnet node number as an appletalk address. :-)
>
> Kinton
>
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