From: Thomas Trygar (trygar@xxxxxxxx)
Date: Fri Feb 09 2001 - 15:51:46 GMT-3
I concur. ISDN is a few points, but you also have other points that ride on top
of your working circuit. There's ip ospf demand circuit, snapshot, backup
interface, and dialer watch. Some of these are few in points or configuration
time, but you have to know the commands cold.
You don't have time to look on the CD or in the books. If you can just go to
each specific router mode (global, interface, etc.) and use the question mark t
o
complete the configuration, you will not get caught on the time crunch.
Tom
Mask Of Zorro wrote:
> You have got to "own" isdn. It is a core topic on the lab. Voice you can do
> at Mentorlabs or CCBootcamp, and you can get all you need out of it in a few
> hours. ISDN could take several days/weeks to become expert with. Go with the
> simulator...
>
> Z
>
> >From: "Ronald Ramcharran" <RonaldR@SpeakEasy.Net>
> >Reply-To: "Ronald Ramcharran" <RonaldR@SpeakEasy.Net>
> >To: "GroupStudy" <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
> >Subject: Lab Equiptment Choice
> >Date: Fri, 9 Feb 2001 11:56:35 -0500
> >
> >I have to make a decision.
> >
> >Buy voice gear for 2 of my 2600 routers or buy an ISDN simulator.
> >
> >I feel the ISDN simulator is the better choice because ISDN can cost you =
> >a lot of point if one of your routing protocols depend on it. Then there =
> >is the 2 to 4 ISDN point.
> >
> >Voice is still on worth 3 or 4 points.
> >
> >What are your thoughts on this?
> >
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