Re: New Member

From: John Conzone (jkconzone@xxxxxxxx)
Date: Sun Jan 14 2001 - 16:25:27 GMT-3


   
    There is the exceptional rocket scientist who can read books and pass
the lab, but for the other 90 percent of us getting on a rack of 4-6 routers
and practicing labs 6-8 hours a day is a must.
    If you're serious about this buy some routers and labs. It will help you
pass the lab much faster, guaranteed.
    By the way, I don't work for any router or lab reseller either. Just
trying to help you pass quicker.

                                                            John Conzone
                                                            CCIE# 6409

----- Original Message -----
From: "Sumeet Gohri" <sgohri@cox.rr.com>
To: "Ronnie Royston" <RonnieR@globaldatasys.com>; "'Bruce Williams
(TruePosition)'" <bwilliams@trueposition.com>; <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Sunday, January 14, 2001 2:04 PM
Subject: Re: New Member

> Hi Bruce/Ronnie,
>
> I agree with Ronnie that practicing scenarios is better than reading lots
of
> books. I think good wide ranging knowledgebase based upon the written exam
> is enough however to get through the LAB I think good practise with the
> scenarios is a must.
>
> my 2cents
>
> Sumeet
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Ronnie Royston" <RonnieR@globaldatasys.com>
> To: "'Bruce Williams (TruePosition)'" <bwilliams@trueposition.com>;
> <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
> Sent: Sunday, January 14, 2001 1:44 PM
> Subject: RE: New Member
>
>
> > 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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