From: cdmurray@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Date: Fri Dec 21 2001 - 03:42:57 GMT-3
David,
I hear what you say. Go get 'em.
Working against the odds takes you back before it takes you forward.
Chrissy
Giveortake@aol
.com To: jthao1@hotmail.com,
Sent by: tkc9789@hotmail.com, ccielab@groupstu
dy.com
nobody@groupst cc:
udy.com Subject: Re: 1-day lab format
12/21/2001
04:13 PM
Please respond
to Giveortake
Its late and I will say what I shouldnt say out loud that everyone will
eventually find out if they don't already know it.
If you do not work for a large company with many CCIE's or people
attempting
the CCIE you will not pass this exam on the first try. Or even the second
try. Unless of course you monitor this thread for at least 6 months.
The
reason is this exam really isnt passable without being extremely
knowledgable
AND cheating........ Let me say of course that I would never cheat and
break the NDA............
I don't care how good you are at configuring Cisco products, you will be
hit
with things you havent done and or are not done regularly. Thus you will
run out of time.
On one hand certification sucks because a lot depends on your ability to
learn how to take the specific test. I do give Cisco credit though
because
this is the hardest test I have ever contemplated in my entire life. Even
with consulting with anyone that will give me any clue as to what the exam
is
all about and studying for hundreds if not thousands of hours I still am
probably not capable of passing this exam......
Cisco has made this exam difficult enough that no matter what you do you
will
have to spend huge amounts of time on the routers and understand the
configs.
Then again its only a test and the little guy who doesnt have access to
consulting those that have taken it 4 times is at a disadvantage.
As always I will master the game..... See you with my CCIE # in April 2002
on my second attempt.......
David
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