Justin,
It is definitely a matter of being good at the technologies. For example,
suppose you had to configure some type of conditional routing in BGP. Are
you familiar with all the commands to do so? If not, you may be playing
around with certain things and hopping on various routers without being 100%
sure beforehand that your solution will work.
It's also a matter of being good at reading ahead. Another BGP example,
suppose you have one task that asks you to send-community. Well if you read
ahead, you could have already done that when you set up your BGP peerings.
Instead of having to go back into router bgp mode on each router, etc.
I know there are several other good tips but those are what come to my mind.
On Sun, Oct 11, 2009 at 12:24 PM, Justin Mitchell <jgmitchell_at_gmail.com>wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> How do you develop the speed needed to finish everything in a lab in
> the amount of given? Is simply a matter of being that GOOD at
> everything in the lab?
>
> I took a 5 hour graded assessment yesterday, and although I did better
> than the average score, I didn't finish and lost points on basic
> topics for a variety of reasons. It was a great learning experience as
> I sat watching my time count down and started looking for the easy
> stuff I knew I could earn points on. Sadly, those were "advanced"
> topics and I definitely found my weak areas.
>
> Justin G. Mitchell
> e: jgmitchell_at_gmail.com | skype: justin.g.mitchell
>
>
> Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
>
> _______________________________________________________________________
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-- Bryan Bartik CCIE #23707 (R&S), CCNP Sr. Support Engineer - IPexpert, Inc. URL: http://www.IPexpert.com Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.netReceived on Sun Oct 11 2009 - 13:10:10 ART
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