RE: Ome Day and a Wake Up

From: Scott Morris (smorris@xxxxxxxx)
Date: Mon May 29 2000 - 23:07:30 GMT-3


   
Looks like a good list... but despite whatever the pressure is, don't
forget to breathe! Many take this for granted, and it can really complicate
things when you don't do it!!!

All kidding aside, that pretty well covers things. Although, in #2, I would
suggest using one of your scrap sheets of paper to jot general notes down,
such as required network addresses and the overall range, and things like
that. So when you start, you know what constraints you're working within,
and don't waste time later...

Also, as a pre #1 (#0.5?) bring multiple colored pens, so you can keep
things slightly logical. that way, as the stress is mounting and the day is
going on (and you're still breathing), things are at least vaguely organized
in your notations!

Best of luck!

Scott Morris, MCSE, CNE(3.x), CCDP (R&S), CCIE (R&S) #4713, Security
Specialization, CCNA - WAN Switching
CCSI #21903
smorris@ccci.com
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Chesapeake Network Solutions http://www.ccci.com
Cell Phone: 941-350-8590 e-mail:smorris@ccci.com
Pager: 800-490-1326 Fax: 606-225-8403

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of
Tony Jackson
Sent: Monday, May 29, 2000 9:24 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Ome Day and a Wake Up

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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