RE: NDA or Not NDA

From: Eddie Parra (eparra@xxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Wed Sep 20 2000 - 16:23:29 GMT-3


   
Ask configuration or conceptual questions based on IOS supported
technologies and not on "My friends lab had...". Any IOS command can be
used to generate a scenario with a given technology. Saying "I had NAT on
my lab" to me isn't a NDA breaker because it is part of the IOS. Emailing
the objective to the NTP section is. Everyone needs to realize that the
CCIE test is mainly based on advertising routes, manipulating routes,
filtering routes, and controlling traffic, with various technologies, over
various medias. People shouldn't want to learn something because someone
had it on their test. People should want to learn something because it is
supported by IOS which makes it applicable to ANY CCIE lab.

What is or isn't on the test can only be answer by saying "Anything
supported by IOS". The CCIEBoot Camp labs are very similar to the real
test. For the most part they test you on the same technologies with
different restrictions. One might let you use point-to-point interfaces and
one might not. The main things is to know how to configure different
medias (Ethernet, Token Ring, ISDN, Frame Relay...etc) and know how ALL
protocols and routing protocols function over them, and their limitations.

-Eddie

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of
Dax Mickelson
Sent: Wednesday, September 20, 2000 2:59 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: NDA or Not NDA

What exactly is considered an NDA question or not an NDA base question. I
am don't want to ask any questions purely on the base that I'll get flamed
about the NDA 'ness of the question.

I can figure out on my own that it is not right to say "What is on the
test?" or "What do I need to know about OSPF?". Considering that, what
should we ask? ("We" being the group who hasn't taken the test yet).



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