From: Scott Morris (swm@emanon.com)
Date: Fri Jan 23 2004 - 16:01:36 GMT-3
That's a hard question to answer... Each particular instructor brings a
different set of experiences and 'extras' to the course. The book is a
minimum of what you should see. It covers the same outline and major topic
areas. But I would like to think that you get additional benefits from the
ILT version of the class from having a seasoned instructor there who can
provide additional examples and insight to how things work! There is a lot
that can be done outside the simple reading of a book.
But with each instructor being different you always run the risk of having
equal information between the class and the book. Check out your instructor
before taking the class!
Just my opinion.
Scott Morris, CCIE4 (R&S/ISP-Dial/Security/Service Provider) #4713, CISSP,
JNCIS, et al.
IPExpert CCIE Program Manager
IPExpert Sr. Technical Instructor
swm@emanon.com/smorris@ipexpert.net
http://www.ipexpert.net
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Hossam
Sent: Friday, January 23, 2004 1:10 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: OT: DQOS Instructor based documentation VR. Book
Hi Group,
Did anyone compared between the DQOS Instracutor based course documentation
and the Self based DQOS Book from Cisco Press? I know both have indentical
TOC (Table of content). But are they close in contents??
I borrowed the Documentation from a friend and i went throught them. But i
am still not so confident abt my QoS knowledge.
Does it worth to buy the book? Will it be more helpfull?
Thanks a lot
SAM
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