From: dwhitley@xxxxxxxxx
Date: Fri Mar 15 2002 - 12:04:46 GMT-3
   
I have to jump in here.  If you look at Cisco's rules for certification
(hiring a CCIE from an already certified company).  A person that has passed
the written and not the lab, might have more potential value, than a person
with their CCIE #### already.
Just a thought.
-----Original Message-----
From: Bob Grafals [mailto:bgrafals@knology.net]
Sent: Friday, March 15, 2002 8:58 AM
To: cc13; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: Will you l4m3rz stop putting CCIE written after your name
Interesting comment from someone whose email name is a variation of  "CCIE".
I would also argue that someone who has made it to this point cannot be an
idiot.  To me this list has been both an invaluable study aid as well as a
source of inspiration.  Where else can you find people from all over the
world voluntarily helping each other.  Let's all keep it positive and
remember what your mother taught you: If you can't say something nice, don't
say anything.
----- Original Message -----
From: "cc13" <cc13@attbroadband.com>
To: <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Friday, March 15, 2002 8:14 AM
Subject: Will you l4m3rz stop putting CCIE written after your name
> I suggest you idiots visit Cisco's web site.  CCIE written is not a Cisco
> certification... neither is CCIE lab candidate.  The fact that you put
> either of these after your name show you are either too ignorant and don't
> understand this or you're so obsessed with putting letters after your name
> that you don't care.  Either way you make yourself look lame.  How about
you
> pass the lab, earn the cert, and then put CCIE #xxxx after your name as
> officially sanctioned by Cisco.  Until then stop posing!
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Thu Jun 13 2002 - 10:57:09 GMT-3