Thanks Rob and 2beone for your positive comments, i am glad you are enjoying
this workbook. It's my favourite and by far my BEST so far.
Thanks
On Sun, Dec 12, 2010 at 8:39 AM, 2beone <2beone_at_gmail.com> wrote:
> To up to that the advanced workbook follows an atomic no nonsense approach
> to each single technology item really focusing on the core of it using a
> simple topology resulting in much higher retention, at least for me.
>
> Sent from my HTC HD2
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: robroutt74_at_gmail.com
> Sent: zaterdag 11 december 2010 22:11
> To: ccielab_at_groupstudy.com
> Subject: OT CCIE materials
>
> I know some of you have had the luxury of attending one of Narbik's more
> recent boot camps and are possibly in possession of his TS book in addition
> to the latest boot camp materials. I received them recently being a
> previous student and I wanted to comment on them for anyone looking for a
> very complete solution to your studies and a fresh approach from Narbik and
> Co.. Narbik's new books have changed a little bit and I believe it has been
> for the better. In previous versions of his workbooks, it seemed like there
> were a lot more reloads; which really detracted from solid focus on the
> technology for me. I know some of us got around this with the configure
> replace command, but his new lab books don't require this near as often. I
> have spoken to other candidates who've regarded his previous materials as
> complete, but somewhat like a lot of individual tech focused labs. I can
> tell you the new format contains all the technology with typically 8-13
> devices per lab. This creates the complexity most like the real lab IMO,
> but still tech focused; which I prefer. I just finished the EIGRP section
> for example. It was about 70 pages long and contained about 45 tasks(no
> reboots). I had 9 separate EIGRP instances running across the topology with
> mutual redistribution, multiple path manipulation, tagging, etc. Now, to
> some of the speed typists out there, that doesn't sound like much, but to
> really get the technology and the feel for EIGRP filtering, redistribution,
> timers, load-balancing, leak-maps, metric calculation, summary routes,
> default routes, etc. this lab would demand about 6-8 hours of keyboard time
> along with note taking if you do that. I am almost done with the Boot Camp
> workbook and I can tell you this is by far his best work yet for those of
> you that have some of his older work.
>
> Just to clarify for some of you, I don't work for Micronics and Narbik
> doesn't pay me or ask me to send this, I send it because I think there are
> a lot folks out there looking for reviews of great products and boot camps
> that will help them ultimately pass the lab, but I think more importantly,
> learn the technologies. No 007 or ninja commands or configurations, just
> in-depth examples and explanations. If you want more info on my experiences
> with his materials or anyone else's I can comment on, feel free to unicast
> me. If I haven't given it a fair shake, I won't comment on it..
>
> Happy Labbing!
>
> -Rob
>
>
> Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
>
> _______________________________________________________________________
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> http://www.groupstudy.com/list/CCIELab.html
>
>
> Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
>
> _______________________________________________________________________
> Subscription information may be found at:
> http://www.groupstudy.com/list/CCIELab.html
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
-- *Narbik Kocharians *CCSI#30832, CCIE# 12410 (R&S, SP, Security) www.MicronicsTraining.com <http://www.micronicstraining.com/> Sr. Technical Instructor *Ask about our FREE Lab Voucher with our Boot Camps* YES! We take Cisco Learning Credits! Training & Remote Racks available Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.netReceived on Sun Dec 12 2010 - 14:31:01 ART
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