Ome Day and a Wake Up

From: Tony Jackson (tjackso@xxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Mon May 29 2000 - 22:23:43 GMT-3


   
Okay fellow techies.
Wednesday, 31st San Jose.

I've studied and studied. 2 1/2years of hands on and lab. I still don't
believe I'm ready for this exam.

I've put together a test strategy I hope to follow. You know like a game
plan before the Super Bowl.

1. Plenty of rest. (I'm spending the night before in a hotel 6 miles out.

2. Read the whole lab booklet first. (I would like to do this one. How much
time will this process consume?)

3. Remain calm. (I think I can do this one. This is not the jungles
of Panama.)

4. Ask the proctor questions. (I suppose I would if I think that they will
help.)

5. Work fast. (I'll try. This is really when the typos start to mount.)

6 Check your work. (Great idea if I have the time.)

This is all that I have listed for myself. Any other suggestions are
welcome.

Tony Jackson, CCNP, CCDA, CNE 4.11
Independant Consultant
Network Systems Engineer
925-202-3993 cell

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of
Chuah Eng Wee
Sent: Monday, May 29, 2000 5:00 PM
To: Earl Aboytes; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: troubleshooting

Hi Earl,

The way i practice troubleshooting is that I inject the fault, then do a
show......
and debug ......... to observe the symptoms when such faults occur. Of
course,
if u have someone to inject the fault, that will be great

Have fun !!
Eng Wee
CCIE #5335

At 02:51 PM 5/29/00 -0700, Earl Aboytes wrote:

>How do you guys practice troubleshooting? If you are the one to inject
>the trouble, you know what to fix.
>
>
>
>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>
>Earl Aboytes
>
>Senior Technical Conultant
>
>GTE Managed Solutions
>
>805-381-8817
>
>earl.aboytes@telops.gte.com
>
>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>
>



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