From: Douglas M Todd, Jr (dtodd@PARTNERS.ORG)
Date: Thu Jun 21 2007 - 13:23:48 ART
Well -
Does not matter whether the platform is a 6500 or a 3500 or a 2900. The
thing that matters is that you understand the concepts and technology.
Sure there are big differences between the platforms, but what does it
matter? If the test is standardized so it will support 4-5 modules then
you just need to know the specifics on those modules. The bigger issue
is what they support for technology and settings which differ between
the modules.
Personally, the 6500 is a fine box and just as understandable as a 3500.
A router is a router and a switch is a switch. STP works the same on
both boxes, ospf/eigrp/rip the same, nat, access-lists etc. Sure there
may be some different options available, but the core technologies are
the same on either platform.
Debugging would be more problematic on a 6500 since a lot of information
is not seen due to the hardware platform architecture.
If you understand the hardcore topics then the 6500 is just another box,
more expensive, but a box none the less.
Personally, I would welcome the 6500 on the lab exam since this is what
you will find in a lot of corporations. However, it really does not
matter nor make sense to have this box on the lab exam. I would doubt
they would put it on the exam when other boxes perform the needed
functionality, are at a fraction of the price, have a smaller footprint.
The need is the technology not necessarily the platform.
DMT
serhat aslan wrote:
> Especially I don't want to see 6500 at R&S.
> 6500 series more than a modular switch (as well as 76xx) it is an unique platform(!). And has got many different type of modules then the other competitors can't do (ACE, CSS, IPS, VPN, NAM, etc...). And all these modules are result of different demands. For instance, IPS->CCIE-Security, CSS-Storage(or I thought). By the way some them are stand on the cutting-edge.
> R&S-lab is testing the protocols behaviors and features. Although design effected the nature of the routing/problem, R&S-lab has no worries on the design concepts(?) with integrating advanced security, L5 switching, etc.. .
> My opinion is 6500 must address at the CCIE-Architecture
> Pls. don't mix the architecture base Capabilities + Design concepts vs Protocol type problems. If The main problem is to interact the real life situations, more effective method is setting up the mixed heterogeneous network. If they could use F5,Checkpoint,Nortel,Alcatel,Juniper, 3-party equipments, it seems reasonable to me interact the real real-life problems.
> As the last point, there are a lot of best practices published at networker series. AFAIK, at least for the effective Cat6500 test we have to use min. 2 of them and normally 4.
>
> Serhat Aslan
>
>
>
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