RE: CCIE True Interview Story

From: Brandon S. Lynch (bsl@mnsginc.com)
Date: Tue Nov 25 2008 - 13:58:59 ARST


More spam.....who cares.

Get over it and move on.

By the way, this is NOT an interesting read.

- Brandon

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Nki
Sent: Tuesday, November 25, 2008 10:50 AM
Cc: nortic @hackermail.com; Huzefa; Cisco Godfather;
ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: CCIE True Interview Story

Not true Dinesh. The whole idea of putting the post is not to embarass
anyone,
and I was very considerate in the level and toughness of question I
asked. His
name is not even Ali and I am not gloating over anyone.
B
I once read a famous quote online when preparing for my CCIE, that at
one
timeB the people who had passed did not know what IP was. I was one of
those
people, so I am not in a position to gloat,B because I know where my
success
came from. Without God I cannot do anything. Now I am not trying to get
into a
religious arguement, just sharing my faith.
B
There are some people in this forum thinking right now thatB these
questions
were unfair to a CCIE,B that theB candidate wasB nervous, or did he
cheat to
pass his exam? Some thinking it is picking on the negative side, that
the
interviewer did not like the candidate..etc
B
This is an open forum, anyone can share opinions. It makes for an
interesting
read.
B
B
Dear Nki,

It seems clear that you where unable to interview at CCIE level.
Obviously,
someone who has just passed CCIE knows routing and switching. If you
interview someone try to understand that they may be nervous and not
able to
express themselves under the stress. A good interviewer would simply try
to
find the best in the person and focus on what they know. Not delve on a
candidates negative side and then gloat on the ccie forum where people
are
trying their best to pass. My guess you just didn't like the guy and
where
subconsciously looking for a reason not to employ him.

On Tue, Nov 25, 2008 at 1:49 PM, Marko Milivojevic
<markom@markom.info>wrote:

> On Tue, Nov 25, 2008 at 13:00, nortic @hackermail.com
> <nortic@hackermail.com> wrote:
> > funny how it is always the CCIE's who dont speak english as a first
> language that are considered as
> > utterly useless idjits. Quite frankly I dont care if i cant explain
> simple network concepts so that the
> > techinical manager can understand it. If i wanted to explain how
DCEF
> works to someone I would
> > become a techinical instructor. Give me the equipment and i'll show
you
> how it works.
>
> I must disagree on one thing. If someone is applying for a consultancy
> job (i.e. any job that requires interaction with customers), that
> someone should be able to fluently speak the language of the region.
> So, if someone is applying for a job in US, he or she should be fluent
> in English. If one is applying for an international position, not
> speaking English is a show-stopper. Some environments tolerate local
> language ignorance, as long as Business Esperanto (English) is spoken.
>
> I must absolutely disagree with not knowing how to explain things in
> at least some detail. What good is that you can punch a bunch of
> commands in terminal when you can't explain what you are doing or what
> the root-cause of the particular problem is?
>
> > Next pom or yank to apply in UAE will be interviewed in arabic.
>
> Fair enough if one is expected to interact with Arabic customers. If
> one is applying for a position in Dubai in order to support EMEA,
> English would be more important than Arabic.
>
> --
> Marko
> CCIE #18427 (SP)
> My network blog: http://cisco.markom.info/
>
>
>B Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
>
>



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