From: Davis, David (DDavis@xxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Thu Jan 10 2002 - 10:52:33 GMT-3
I have heard over and over again to read the entire lab first and all my experi
ence doing practice labs tells me the same thing. I have wasted so much time by
not reading the entire lab first then having to go back and redo the things I
did.
But, my follow up question to that is, what about strategy?
After reading the entire lab, do you-
1) Get started as quickly as possible and just starting doing the things it ask
s, trying to rack up as many points as possible. Then, when you are done with m
ost all tasks, go back and see if what they asked for really happened (like "ca
n you ping r4 e0 from r1"). If it doesn't work then fix it.
OR
2) Spend more significant time planning, drawing a serious diagram, going throu
gh all the questions in your head, looking for all the traps, asking yourself "
well, if I mutually redistribute ospf into bgp at two points I could have a rou
ting loop and I need these access lists on r1 and r3...", and finally implement
ing your perfect plan.
David
-----Original Message-----
From: Yusman@mastersystem.co.id [mailto:Yusman@mastersystem.co.id]
Sent: Thursday, January 10, 2002 5:31 AM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: at the lab exam
For the first attempt lab exam, what is the best, read the whole lab
instruction then do the lab or read per section task then do the test,
without wasting the time
Thanks for the opinion
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