From: Joseph Brunner (joe@affirmedsystems.com)
Date: Fri Aug 15 2008 - 01:15:50 ART
So now that we're past that (and we fight again when we are doing the
SP/VOICE track in race, right?)
What was the other way to get int s0/0.1 multipoint to go down without
dlci's?
I'm still learning too!
_____
From: Hobbs [mailto:deadheadblues@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, August 14, 2008 11:42 PM
To: Joseph Brunner
Cc: Felix Nkansah; kmoorman@gmail.com; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: which workbook are you using and why
you got quite a head start, but i'll try to make it a close one :)
On Thu, Aug 14, 2008 at 9:35 PM, Joseph Brunner <joe@affirmedsystems.com>
wrote:
I hope you do pass.
So I can track race your ass!
JK all the best.
-Joe
_____
From: Hobbs [mailto:deadheadblues@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, August 14, 2008 11:32 PM
To: Joseph Brunner
Cc: Felix Nkansah; kmoorman@gmail.com; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: which workbook are you using and why
nope, no number yet. that's why I'm here. and i'll be trying as hard as I
can until I get it. and I won't take anything for granted. and I will always
consult multiple sources when in doubt. and i read the doccd everyday. my
favorite book is titled "Catalyst 3560 Switches, Rel. 12.2(44)SE, January
2008" and i have multiple vendor workbooks. and i lab EVERYTHING. and i take
notes and i review them. and when there's an unanswered post that piques my
curiosity, i'll try to find an answer. and when someone responds with a
incorrect answer or solution, i'll do my best to find the right one and post
it. and when there's something i just can't get a handle on, i'll search the
archives. and if I can't find it in the archives, i'll query the forum. and
if no on responds, i'll document it in a little notepad file called "things
i still need to research.txt". and i'll review those things every so often.
and i'll repeat the process until i am ready. and i may schedule my lab 6
months in advance, and i may not.
and when people like you try to crush the spirits of people you feel are
unworthy of the quest, i wonder what happened to you along the path that
made you that way
On Thu, Aug 14, 2008 at 9:00 PM, Joseph Brunner <joe@affirmedsystems.com>
wrote:
Nice one.
It will hurt a lot more once you actually pass the lab.
Or was your number on this last message in HTML #FFFFFF and I just missed
it?
$^)
_____
From: Hobbs [mailto:deadheadblues@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, August 14, 2008 9:16 PM
To: Joseph Brunner
Cc: Felix Nkansah; kmoorman@gmail.com; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: which workbook are you using and why
Hey Joe, I seem to remember you telling me that EEK was the only way to get
multipoint interface to fail once the remote DLCI went down. Should I have
taken your word for it?
Don't worry, I'll make plenty of mistakes too and you can point them it.
On Thu, Aug 14, 2008 at 6:55 PM, Joseph Brunner <joe@affirmedsystems.com>
wrote:
That is probably the best answer or post on here in a long time Felix!
Very very well said!
Multiple workbooks! What's next? Removing the 30 day fail period,
You can just go to rtp for a week and take the lab five times?
;)
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Felix Nkansah
Sent: Thursday, August 14, 2008 8:37 PM
To: Hobbs
Cc: kmoorman@gmail.com; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: which workbook are you using and why
Hi Hobbs,
First of all, using a vendor workbook or attending a vendor bootcamp is not
a prerequisite to taking the lab or passing it. I know of some CCIEs who
passed their labs through self-study and practice, and not through the use
of any workbooks (Brian Dennis of IE is a typical example).
One thing you need to understand is that even though we call it a LAB, your
theory and understanding of networking concepts, technologies and their
interworking is tested much more than it appears on the outside.
You want to be a good network engineer when going for the lab (to pass it
and also for your career). Most candidates go for the lab with 'holes' in
their networking knowledge. Thanks the labs are good at exposing these
holes.
You could use a million workbooks from a million vendors, and if you still
dont seal the holes in your networking knowledge, you would still not pass.
Granted, vendor workbooks are supposed to help you do so. If you come to
think of it, how many different ways could one be tested on frame relay?
It's finite.
So if you settle on a workbook from a vendor who teaches the technologies
well and passes you through all the numerous scenarious of FR setups and
configurations (in about 10+ labs) so that you fully master the concepts, do
you think you've got to need a billion more workbooks before you can pass?
As experiences show, the key to passing the lab is mastering the concepts
and gaining the hands-on exposure. Any SINGLE good vendor could help you
achieve that.
Buy time to study and practice, rather than buying thousands of workbooks
and doing little study. And don't think Reading is the same as Studying. Go
figure!
Regards,
Felix Nkansah, CCIE
Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
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