RE: OT - Juniper certification

From: Church, Chuck (cchurch@netcogov.com)
Date: Fri Mar 25 2005 - 10:48:15 GMT-3


Well when you reverse-engineer IOS and run it on your own hardware, you
tend to get all the goodies :)

Chuck Church
Lead Design Engineer
CCIE #8776, MCNE, MCSE
Netco Government Services - Design & Implementation
1210 N. Parker Rd.
Greenville, SC 29609
Home office: 864-335-9473
Cell: 703-819-3495
cchurch@netcogov.com
PGP key: http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0x4371A48D

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
simon hart
Sent: Friday, March 25, 2005 2:05 AM
To: Scott Morris; 'Yinglam Cheung'; 'Danshtr'; 'Group Study (E-mail)'
Subject: RE: OT - Juniper certification

Scott, funny you should mention EIGRP. I expected that the Huawei kit
would
not support EIGRP, however their marketing data sheet clearly states
support
for EIGRP!! Not sure how accurate this is, as the same data sheet
professes
support for OSPR. OSPR - perhaps an Huawei proprietary dynamic routing
protocol :)

S.

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of
Scott
Morris
Sent: 24 March 2005 21:13
To: 'simon hart'; 'Yinglam Cheung'; 'Danshtr'; 'Group Study (E-mail)'
Subject: RE: OT - Juniper certification

I wonder if EIGRP is on that test? ;)

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
simon hart
Sent: Thursday, March 24, 2005 4:06 PM
To: Yinglam Cheung; Danshtr; Group Study (E-mail)
Subject: RE: OT - Juniper certification

The company I work for is starting to provide Huawei routers as a
managed
service solution (i.e. CE device on MPLS networks).

I notice they also run a certification programme resulting in an HCIE.
Anybody have any experience with this?

Simon

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of
Yinglam Cheung
Sent: 24 March 2005 20:49
To: Danshtr; Group Study (E-mail)
Subject: Re: OT - Juniper certification

hardness is a subjective thing. though it's comparing apple to orange,
JNCIP-M is more related to CCIE R&S (IGP and others features), JNCIE-M
is
more related to CCIE SP (MPLS and other features).

Danshtr <danshtr@gmail.com> wrote:Hello,

I think I can find a sponsor for another certification, I was thinking
about
CCIE-SP, but I want something different.

What do you think about Juniper's JNCIP-M and JNCIE-M ?

Is it hard as the R&S lab?
Is it respectable as the CCIE certification?
Do they have numbers as CCIE's?

--
Best regards,
Dan


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