From: Darby Weaver (darbyweaver@yahoo.com)
Date: Mon Nov 27 2006 - 22:51:27 ART
I'd have to say:
From my first attempt I walked away knowing the
following:
1. I knew the layout was similar to other offerings
from Cisco, so I was not going to permit myself to
make any mistakes with regard to Layer 2 Technologies,
so I practiced these technologies to perfection
including verification tasks using show/debug.
2. I thought about some other areas, but due to life
and poor planning on my part did not eliminated a
couple of other technologies from being problem areas.
From my second attempt:
1. I learned that even though I may think I have a
technology wrapped up pretty well, I'd better not over
confident and keep it close to my fingertips until at
least I have my digits...
2. I will now verify everything first prior to
starting my labs.
3. Not making drawing early or verifying given
information can cause pressure later.
A lot of things you here from Scott Morris, the
Brians, Brad, and Mr. Caslow's team at NMC...
Reading ahead and thinking things through, look up and
look at things for what they are trying to accomplish.
Look at how something can be graded.
Look at a given device, the topology, and ask yourself
how it relates to other devices in the topology.
I am doing a turnover with a new guy at my soon to be
old job and I've found that things are amazingly
simple when you look at them like this.
Just a few things I've noticed w/o breaking the NDA.
--- Michael Zuo <mzuo@ixiacom.com> wrote:
> Hi Mike,
>
> I seem to make a lot of stupid mistakes even though
> I knew how to do
> something. This usually happens when I look at the
> solution of practice
> labs. I am currently building a list of all the
> stupid mistakes I have
> made so far and how to avoid them :) Just curious
> (of course,
> conforming to NDA, without referring to any exam
> particulars), how did
> you realize you made a "stupid" mistake? And what
> kind of stupid
> mistake was it?
>
> Thanks in advance
>
> PS. If anyone else has a good method of avoid
> stupid mistakes, please
> let me know as well.
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: nobody@groupstudy.com
> [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
> Mike O
> Sent: Tuesday, November 21, 2006 9:20 PM
> To: Brad Ellis
> Cc: ccielab@groupstudy.com
> Subject: Re: Has anyone passed recently?
>
> I was close but I made two very very STUPID
> mistakes. I scored 94% in
> Briding & switching it wasn;t that hard , just some
> of the wording in
> the
> other sections was rather pathetic and had both
> proctors puzzled. I
> understand a good technical challenge but dont try
> fool someone but
> vaguely
> wording a question.
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Brad Ellis" <brad@ccbootcamp.com>
> To: <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
> Sent: Wednesday, November 22, 2006 12:02 AM
> Subject: OT: Has anyone passed recently?
>
>
> >I heard a rumor that since the R&S lab has changed
> no one has
> passed...is
> >this true? Does anyone know of anyone who has
> passed the new 3560
> format?
> >
> > thanks,
> > Brad Ellis
> > CCIE#5796 (R&S / Security)
> > CCSI#30482
> > Network Learning Inc - A Cisco Sponsored
> Organization (SO)
> > YES! We take Cisco Learning credits!
> > mailto:brad@ccbootcamp.com
> > http://www.ccbootcamp.com (Cisco Training and
> Advanced Technology
> Rental
> > Racks)
> > http://www.ccbootcamp.com/groupstudy.html
> (groupstudy member
> discounts!)
> > Voice: 702-968-5100
> > FAX: 702-446-8012
> >
>
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Fri Dec 01 2006 - 08:05:48 ART