From: Kenneth Wygand (KWygand@customonline.com)
Date: Wed Jun 16 2004 - 17:15:43 GMT-3
Yash,
Depends on a lot of variables, but without knowing 90% of the topics
PERFECTLY (100%), one has very, very, very little chance to pass. You
will need the 20 points on things you *THINK* you know, but according to
the CCIE exam, you simply don't.
Just my experience and my $0.02.
Kenneth E. Wygand
Systems Engineer, Project Services
CISSP #37102, CCNP, CCDP, ACSP, Cisco IPT Design Specialist, MCP, CNA,
Network+, A+
Custom Computer Specialists, Inc.
"The only unattainable goal is the one not attempted."
-Anonymous
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Yash Bajpai
Sent: Wednesday, June 16, 2004 4:00 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Somewhat OT: CCIE lab temparament
Hi all,
I have a question for the experienced people who have
taken the labs. (sorry, but iam panicking)
I am thinking that no matter what i do, there would be
questions/problems in the lab that i would not know
how to tackle. Technologies that i would not be very
conversant.
For instance, i have not got an opportunity to work on
ATM, PPOA, PPOE and i dont seem to find the right docs
on the CCO too...
what is the best way to handle things you are not sure
off (or not good at?) run to the doc CD and look for
config guides? try to accomplish it with whatever you
know of it? or hope that you can make up 80% by doing
everything else perfectly? (like i said, iam
panicking)
or perhaps, one cannot hope to get the covetted number
unless one knows everything there is to know?
Regards,
Yash
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