From: Yurchenko, Michael (michael.yurchenko@xxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Thu Jan 25 2001 - 17:46:05 GMT-3
Yes, the exam is a serious challenge and you want to make every effort to
pass and the best use of the time allocated. It's not something you do on a
daily basis after all!
Michael Yurchenko
CCIE# 6695, CCDP, CCNP ATM Specialist, MCSE
Customer Support Engineer - 2
michael.yurchenko@verizon.com
610-407-2154
-----Original Message-----
From: Earl Aboytes [mailto:Earl@dnssystems.com]
Sent: Thursday, January 25, 2001 3:34 PM
To: 'Jason T. Rohm '; 'CCIELIST (E-mail) '
Subject: RE: Lab Troubleshooting Section
Jason,
I was told my point score before I went into troubleshooting. I have heard
that they do not tell you sometimes. I am not sure what the official policy
is.
Whatever you do don't say to yourself that you only need 20 points so you
are only going to look for 20 faults. What if you get one or two wrong or
the proctor doesn't like your reasoning for citing the problem? My
suggestion is to find all 25 faults. If you have to use all of your time to
find that 25th fault, find it. You don't want to go all that way and not
pass because you thought you had enough points but didn't.
Earl Aboytes, CCIE 6097
-----Original Message-----
From: Jason T. Rohm
To: CCIELIST (E-mail)
Sent: 1/25/2001 12:13 PM
Subject: Lab Troubleshooting Section
I have taken the lab once, but did not make it to troubleshooting.
I know that they have a policy of not telling you your score at the end
of
day one... do they let you know where you stand (pointwise) at lunch on
day
two? (I got sent home at that point.)
The bottom line is... do you know how many faults you need to correct to
pass? If I had all my points (no likely) it would be kinda silly to
spend
the whole afternoon looking for 25 faults when I only needed 5 to pass.
Thank you,
Jason T. Rohm
Sr. Network Engineer
Wire Technologies, Inc
jtrohm@wiretech-inc.com
(920) 766-5172
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