From: kym blair (kymblair@hotmail.com)
Date: Tue Aug 19 2003 - 07:57:59 GMT-3
Greg,
You sound pretty sharp. I don't think you'll have to read any books to get
your CCIE. Just sign up for the lab; I'm sure you'll pass the first time,
especially since you're already familiar with traceroute and nslookup. Can
you use ping too?
Most of the guys on this list work in the networking field, so why don't you
post your resume here and let us pass it around. You'll be well known in no
time at all. Our company has an entry level position available, but I think
you're too advanced and would get bored. Besides, it only starts at $96K;
not enough for you.
Waiting for your resume. Best of luck,
Kym Blair
#11115
>From: dkdk dkfdk <imagooch@yahoo.com>
>Reply-To: dkdk dkfdk <imagooch@yahoo.com>
>To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
>Subject: OT: New to Cisco
>Date: Mon, 18 Aug 2003 19:53:20 -0700 (PDT)
>
>Hi I am new to cisco I have a quick question for you network guys. What
>book should I read to be a CCIE? I read a book and now I am Sun certified
>Solaris Admin. I want to continue my learning and become a smart IT guy.
>How can I get to the six figure plus salaries the fastest? I have very
>little IT experience except using MS Office and AOL but I can really click
>around to get this stuff working. I think network expert is the next
>logical step. Also I was reading about traceroute and nslookup, does
>anybody have any good explanations of how these thingies work?
>
>
>Thanks
>
>
>Greg
>
>
>
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