Re: Where to Sit the lab?

From: David Ankers (d.ankers@xxxxxxxxx)
Date: Wed Feb 07 2001 - 23:28:32 GMT-3


   
The only reason that I would concider taking the IE in an place but the
closest location is the waiting list. Maybe some proctors are easy to deal
with that's just because people are different but what happens if you fly
10,000 miles only to get a proctor that is having a bad day because his cat
died the night before?

On Thursday 08 February 2001 01:11, you wrote:
> Have no idea whether it's easier or not at different locations. The issue
> for me
> and others , is your employer going to pay for you flying halfway around
> the world to a different CCIE lab site? I work for Cisco and they won't pay
> for doing this. And I a not going to pay thousands of dollars to fly to
> Brazil to take
> a lab test there in the "hope" that it's easier there. Which by the way I
> really
> don't think is that much easier.
>
> I would strongly discourage trying to find ways around the testing system
> and trying to find a site that will be easier to pass at.
> Just spend as much time practicing and studying as possible. If you are
> ready you will pass no matter where you take the lab. It can be a painful
> process getting there but just take it as a learning experience.
>
> Just my two cents ...
>
> Kevin
>
> At 04:28 PM 2/7/01 -0800, asda fsdaf wrote:
> >I've heard stuff that it may be easier to sit the R/S
> >lab in some locations than others e.g. Soth Africa.
> >Some have said that all locations have standardised
> >labs, so it makes no difference where u do them.
> >Others argue that some protectors are nicer/easier to
> >reason with etc
> >
> >Any thoghts please?
> >
> >Peter
> >
> >



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Thu Jun 13 2002 - 10:28:41 GMT-3