RE: Loaded question - no flamewar intended!

From: Brian Dennis (bdennis@internetworkexpert.com)
Date: Thu Jun 17 2004 - 16:27:02 GMT-3


Robbie,
        The best thing to do is to download the sample lab from each
company and look at what style of practice lab works best for you. Each
company's labs are different as you will see.

http://www.netmasterclass.net/site/pdf/DOiT-SAMPLE-SCENARIO.pdf
http://www.racktimerentals.com/IPexpert-V5-Free.pdf
http://www.internetworkexpert.com/downloads/iewb-rs.sample.lab.pdf

        You might also look at the number of recent CCIEs that each
company has listed on their website to get a good idea of how many
people are using their products and services to pass the lab.

Good Luck,

Brian Dennis, CCIE #2210 (R&S/ISP-Dial/Security)
bdennis@internetworkexpert.com
Internetwork Expert, Inc.
http://www.InternetworkExpert.com
Toll Free: 877-224-8987
Direct: 775-745-6404 (Outside the US and Canada)

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
robbie
Sent: Thursday, June 17, 2004 11:42 AM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Loaded question - no flamewar intended!

I'm getting ready to gear up for the R&S lab, and I'm trying to decide
which sutdy guide/workbook is right for me. What do you guys perceive as
the strengths and weaknesses of the various workbooks? (ipexpert, IE,
NLi, etc) I'm trying to make only one purchase in the specific instance
because I'd rather be spending the money on routers and switches than 4
or 5 different costly studyguides. I know that some responses will
simply be 'IE/NLI/ipexpert is :win:', but I need to know why you think
that, instead of it just being that way. Thanks in advance for all your
advice.

Robbie.



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Sat Jul 03 2004 - 19:40:43 GMT-3