From: Peter van Oene (pvo@usermail.com)
Date: Fri Oct 25 2002 - 11:37:30 GMT-3
At 09:02 AM 10/25/2002 -0300, Persio Pucci wrote:
>Folks,
>
>I've been thinking about it... what if you configure a couple of things no the
>router that YOU consider being good pratice, that altough they are (or may be)
>not asked in the lab content, like for example, disabling ip http-server, or,
>if you have is-is on the lab, enabling clns routing altough not needed if only
>routing IP (and not using default route).... how would thet see that? Would
>it count towards you or wouldn't it make any difference?
>
>Regards,
>
>Persio
If you write an essay on the back of your all multiple choice exam about
some of the topics you saw on the test, would you get any marks for
it? Would you waste your time doing that when you could be spending more
time figuring out the multiple choice questions?
Keep in mind that the lab is a test. No where on it does it ask you to
build a robust network. It has a set of questions that have a set of
acceptable answers. If you are not contributing toward an acceptable
answer, you are wasting your time. If you have that much time on your
hands, take a 10 minute break, clear you head, and come back and mentally
do the test over to ensure that you read everything right and didn't miss
any subtle nuances.
The only things worth typing that aren't asked for would include things
that will help you be more efficient when answering questions. Disabling
the annoying domain lookups and filling in some time saving aliases would
fit here.
Pete
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