It all boils down to the commitment of the one giving the bootcamp. The next
most important thing is the didactical experience of this person and the last
most important one is the knowledge of this person. This is the only bootcamp
I have been where the one giving it excels in all three and than some. I think
we as engineers deserve this.
Sent from my iPhone
On 20 nov. 2010, at 12:37, Radioactive Frog <pbhatkoti_at_gmail.com> wrote:
> I never been in any bootcamp but looks like I must go in one to get an
experience of what's bootcamps are like...
> Looks like they do kind magic in 5 days.
>
>
> On Sat, Nov 20, 2010 at 7:50 AM, Vitali Aivazov <vitali.aivazov_at_gmail.com>
wrote:
> I had an opportunity and big pleasure to participate in Narbik's bootcamp
> this week and indeed, I got the same feeling as 2beone wrote. I can say
that
> Narbik helps you to think out-of-box which pushes you to dig deeper into
the
> technology and consequently understand it on much deeper level perhaps even
> deeper than the lab exam itself which can only benefit you. I saw that
> teaching method is focused not only on getting the exam passed but on
> becoming an expert of what you do, meaning to build solid foundation of how
> IOS works and predicting it.
>
> BTW I haven't laughed so much since long long time, I was completely black
> holed in vrf :)))
>
>
> Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
>
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Received on Sat Nov 20 2010 - 13:19:03 ART
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