From: Joseph Brunner (joe@affirmedsystems.com)
Date: Wed Jun 18 2008 - 03:56:26 ART
>I feel like I'm losing my time because I can do 95% of the configs straight
>away on those simple scenarios.
Really?
Start going over-
The mac address move features, link-state groups, MVR, complex vacls, some
igmp profiles, macros, hierarchical qos maps for the 3560, and some other
stuff queued up on my rack for you... There is more to "switching" on the
blueprint than meets the eye...
I think you better hit the doc cd... there has to be some tuff stuff there
for you to learn...
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Eduardo Rossettini
Sent: Wednesday, June 18, 2008 12:58 AM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: First lab preparation steps
Hi guys,
I have just joined the list and was wondering if some of you could point
me out to the right direction.
I passed last week on the written exam (R/S) with 89% score and started
with my lab preparation over the last few days. I started with LAN
switching and have done some labs using cisco docs and scenarios from
Cisco Press - Lan Switching book, but I feel like I'm losing my time
because I can do 95% of the configs straight away on those simple
scenarios.
My first plan was read, read and read, do some labs from the scenarios
on the book/cisco docs for every single technology. But now I'm feeling
I'm not learning anything.
Should I move on and start doing some technology labs from a ccie vendor
out there to find out my technology gaps or stick to the preparation
books until having strong confidence in any single technology?
Thanks in advance
Eduardo
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