From: Scott Morris (smorris@ipexpert.com)
Date: Sun May 27 2007 - 10:56:37 ART
Heheheh... Do you feel there's crowding in the R&S space? :)
By that logic, wouldn't Storage be a more appropriate choice? Obviously,
one can study whatever they want to, but figure out where your market is
first, and figure out what things you LIKE to do as well! Then choose which
track best suits you.
Scott Morris, CCIE4 (R&S/ISP-Dial/Security/Service Provider) #4713, JNCIE
#153, CISSP, et al.
CCSI/JNCI-M/JNCI-J
IPexpert VP - Curriculum Development
IPexpert Sr. Technical Instructor
smorris@ipexpert.com
http://www.ipexpert.com
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Radioactive Frog
Sent: Sunday, May 27, 2007 7:12 AM
To: Cisco certification
Subject: CCIE - Routing/switching or Voice track?
*Total of Worldwide CCIEs:* *14,387* (last updated 04.2.2007) Total of
Routing and Switching CCIEs: 13408 Total of Security CCIEs: 906 Total of
Service Provider CCIEs: 474 Total of Storage Networking CCIEs: 70 Total of
Voice CCIEs: 445
Source:
http://www.cisco.com/web/learning/le3/ccie/certified_ccies/worldwide.html
Based on the above statistics, why still people (included me) are going for
Routing and switching track?
I am dropping my idea of going for CCIE in RS track. I am seriously thinking
to go for CCIE-Voice track. There is no crowd!
What you guys think?
Frog
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Fri Jun 01 2007 - 06:55:22 ART