From: Koen Peetermans (K.Peetermans@chello.be)
Date: Mon Sep 27 2004 - 13:07:55 GMT-3
I think it means ON THE OTHER HAND.
Joke apart, I was wondering for a long time what the HTH meant that some
people are using over here. Apparantly it can mean a lot of things :
HTH Hope That Helps
HTH Hope This Helps
HTH Hand To Hand combat
HTH Hand To Heart (I'm being honest)
HTH Happy To Help
HTH Hard to Handle
HTH Harry the Horse
HTH Hawthorne, Nevada USA (Airport Code)
HTH Head to Head
HTH Heart To Heart
HTH Hell This Hurts
HTH High Tech High (California Charter School)
HTH High Test Hypochlorite
HTH Highway Traffic Headquarters
HTH Hit the Highway
HTH Hjdlper Torr Hud
HTH Hollywood Tower Hotel (Disney's Tower of Terror)
HTH Home Town Hero (band)
HTH Hoping This Helps
HTH How the Hell?
Cheers,
Koen.
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
ccie2be
Sent: maandag 27 september 2004 17:57
To: Howard C. Berkowitz; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: Service Provider or Security Track
Howard,
Excuse my ignorance, but what does OTOH stand for?
Tim
----- Original Message -----
From: "Howard C. Berkowitz" <hcb@gettcomm.com>
To: <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Sunday, September 26, 2004 12:37 PM
Subject: Re: Service Provider or Security Track
> At 9:32 PM +1000 9/26/04, marc van hoof wrote:
> >Hi Everyone,
> >
> >
> >
> >Long time no post.
> >
> >
> >
> >Well, since passing the R&S track I've been having withdrawal symptoms
due
> >to not studying anymore, so I'm tempted to do either the SP or the Sec
track
> >next. I'd be interested in hearing people's feedback on both of these,
from
> >people who are either currently studying for them, or people who have
passed
> >them.
> >
> >I found the R&S lab exam easy, however there's technologies in both the
SP
> >and Sec tracks that I haven't had as much exposure too, so that will
> >obviously make it a little tougher.
> >
> If your interest is economic, I would recommend security. There is a
> clear need for certified security people by Cisco resellers. OTOH, if
> you are interested in security, the CISSP may be a more valuable
> certification.
>
> The "service provider" track is one that I find a somewhat misleading
> concept. In general, the technologies on which it focuses are of
> value to dial or broadband access providers, but not ISPs. My
> experience in the North American Network Operators Group (NANOG)
> leads me to believe that very few ISPs particulary care if you have a
> CCIE or not -- indeed, I've had some express concern about it since
> the BGP in the lab is so divorced from Best Current Practice that it
> may have taught you the wrong way to do things.
>
> _______________________________________________________________________
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