RE: isdn in san jose

From: Scott Morris (swm@emanon.com)
Date: Sat Jun 25 2005 - 01:24:47 GMT-3


No, it's more along the lines that specific details that lead to things
studied or not are part of it. Blue cables have nothing to do with how
ethernet may be tested. The 3550's are listed on Cisco's blueprint.

You aren't talking about hardware. The BRI line is the same, and you know
you have those because they're on the blueprint. Until Cisco decides to
list an ISDN switch-type on their blueprint, assume that any of the
basic-??? Types are fair game.

It's more like asking is the frame-relay cloud using Cisco or IETF
encapsulation.

Scott

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of John
Matus
Sent: Saturday, June 25, 2005 12:09 AM
To: swm@emanon.com; 'robbie'; 'Group Study'
Subject: Re: isdn in san jose

hmm.......i wouldn't have thought that talking about the isdn simulator
would be a violation of the NDA. is it alsoa violation to say that they use
3550 switches and 3xxx series routers??<not that i can even remember, i did
not sit next to a rack> or that they use blue cat5 cables even :) i think
talking about the "exam" and talking about "hardware" are 2 differnt things.

the test is what is given to you in the exam book. what you do the test on
is anciliary. it's certianly not a violation to say that there is a spare
copy of the doc cd in the rom drive....!!!

Regards,

John D. Matus
MCSE, CCNP
Office: 818-782-2061
Cell: 818-430-8372
jmatus@pacbell.net
----- Original Message -----
From: "Scott Morris" <swm@emanon.com>
To: "'John Matus'" <jmatus@pacbell.net>; "'robbie'" <robbie@packetized.org>;
"'Group Study'" <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Friday, June 24, 2005 8:44 PM
Subject: RE: isdn in san jose

> Well, you realize that it's all a function of the ISDN switch anyway...
> And
> there's also that whole NDA thing too....
>
> So, know how to do SPIDs (which really aren't difficult) and if you
> have them, cool, if you don't, cool too!
>
> As soon as someone says that there are no SPIDs on the exam, it'll
> just take people a few minutes in the lab to go and reprogram the ISDN
> simulators and BAM, everyone gets SPIDs! ;)
>
> Scott
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf
> Of John Matus
> Sent: Friday, June 24, 2005 11:28 PM
> To: robbie; Group Study
> Subject: Re: isdn in san jose
>
> i love getting straight answers :-P
>
>
> Regards,
>
> John D. Matus
> MCSE, CCNP
> Office: 818-782-2061
> Cell: 818-430-8372
> jmatus@pacbell.net
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "robbie" <robbie@packetized.org>
> To: "Group Study" <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
> Sent: Friday, June 24, 2005 8:07 PM
> Subject: Re: isdn in san jose
>
>
>> What's the practical difference between basic-ni and basic-net3,
>> other than default SPID formats (20255512120101 vs 0555121201, etc)?
>>
>> Cheers,
>> Robbie
>>
>> John Matus wrote:
>>> do they use basic-net3 in san jose?
>>>
>>>
>>> Regards,
>>>
>>> John D. Matus
>>> MCSE, CCNP
>>> Office: 818-782-2061
>>> Cell: 818-430-8372
>>> jmatus@pacbell.net
>>>
>>> ____________________________________________________________________
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