The other thing that is nice about having knowledge of where things are in
the documentation is the documentation can make nice templates for copy
paste for saving time.
If you have a long BGP configuration or my favorite example is DMVPN for the
Security lab. Go to the configuration section. Copy the example. Make the
changes you need and paste it in. This does not mean rely on it as a
template standard for you to know how to configure a technology; it is just
a time saving technique. If you don't understand what is in the example
then you are not going to understand what the question is asking so please
don't' think I am saying this as a shortcut to studying.
I think everyone takes the others statement and twists it to make it sound
wrong. I agree with Narbik. I take his point to mean that if you are
expecting the product documentation to be a crutch for your unpreparedness
then you are going to have a big wakeup call at lab day. I take Anthony's
statement to mean that he feels this way too. They just express it
differently. Can't we all just get along ;)
I didn't read every response but to someone that asked about using Google
instead of learning the location. Definitely not. Learn the documentation.
It is your one friend in the lab. But your time is limited. You need to
know the majority of the lab by heart walking in on game day.
Regards,
Tyson Scott - CCIE #13513 R&S, Security, and SP
Managing Partner / Sr. Instructor - IPexpert, Inc.
Mailto: tscott_at_ipexpert.com
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody_at_groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody_at_groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of Ryan
West
Sent: Wednesday, June 16, 2010 1:26 PM
To: Narbik Kocharians
Cc: GAURAV MADAN; sunil kumar maryala; ccielab_at_groupstudy.com
Subject: RE: Question CCIELab
From: Narbik Kocharians [mailto:narbikk_at_gmail.com]
Sent: Wednesday, June 16, 2010 1:16 PM
May be they do it for IP services?????? That i can go for, but NOT in areas
like "Cat QoS, IPv6, BGP, Multicast, IPv6 Multicast". I cover every possible
command when it comes to BGP, OSPF, Eigrp, Cat QoS and etc......i divided
the
command summary and wrote a lab for each command that can possibly be there,
now what is Cisco going to pick? But i can see how that can work in areas
like
IP Services.
So you agree it's possible to have a section on the config that is geared
towards having the candidate make a trip to the DoC CD?
'service nagle' comes to mind.
The DoC CD covers every single command, doesn't mean I can remember all of
them, the point of this whole conversation is that it's not a bad idea to
know
where stuff is.
-ryan
Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
Received on Wed Jun 16 2010 - 14:56:00 ART
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