From: Ronnie Royston (RonnieR@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Sun Jan 14 2001 - 15:44:44 GMT-3
Hi Bruce. I believe that you'd better prepare for the lab by putting the
books down, and practicing senarios. Make senarios up, if you have to. You
should be able to get some CCIE SE practice labs from some people on this
list (I'll send some in another email as attachments don't get through the
list). When you get stuck, open those books and look for the answers.
Don't even read Chapters 1 - 9 in Halabi, start at chapter 10, "configuring
...".
Reading this stuff and configuring it are different jobs. I find that I
learn more when I configure myself and only after getting stumped, look in a
book.
PS After you can't figure it out from the books, post it here and you'll get
the answer, but, I believe you'll learn more if you try and find it
yourself. Good luck.
That's my 2 cents.
-----Original Message-----
From: Bruce Williams (TruePosition) [mailto:bwilliams@trueposition.com]
Sent: Sunday, January 14, 2001 10:33 AM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: New Member
I just joined the CCIE Lab list today. I am scheduled to take my lab on =
Sept 13th and 14th in RTP, NC. Currently I am doing labs from CIMs, and =
labs from "CCIE All in One Lab Study Guide". After I finish Internet =
"Routing TCP/IP, I plan to read "Internet Routing Architectures", "Cisco =
LAN Switching" and Caslow's "Bridges, Routers and Switches". By the =
time, I finish that it will be close to my scheduled lab date and I am =
hoping possibly to attend Mentor Technologies, "ECP1" course or do the =
labs from CCbootcamp. How does my plan sound? Any suggestions.
Bruce Williams
bruce@williamsnetworking.com
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