Lukasz,
I should be in Poland the week of May 28th, and sure anytime my friend.
When is the Zacopane event?
To all,
Lukasz is one of those friendly guys that knows his stuff backwards, it's a
GR8 pleasure to sit around and talk about SP with this gentleman. Every
time i talk to this guy i learn more stuff.
See you in May my friend
2012/3/2 #ukasz Bromirski <lukasz_at_bromirski.net>
> On 2012-03-02 21:22, Narbik Kocharians wrote:
>
> It s cool to tell the world that you are a CCIE, but the big question is
>> what are you going to do with it? OK, I am a doctor, now what?
>>
>
> I think that a CCIE will know a CCIE in first few sentences during
> discussing over technical subject. For some of people you'll know that
> the knowledge is rusty but it's there, for some - that the person
> doesn't even know where to start searching for a clue. People will go
> all buzzwords or silence (depending on the personality) when
> hit with "how would PIM SSM behave here?" or "how much labels it
> would take if we go with scenario A or scenario B?". The unfortunate
> truth is, with time and lack of practice, your skills will fade anyway.
>
> I have a pretty simple solution for it - work in an environment where
> your friendly CCIEs will challenge you from time to time with a
> question forcing you to think, not to mumble something under nose and
> dissapear. I have such great opportunity, and while I'm a #15929 and
> double - I bow before them.
>
> The problem with a CCIE certification - pretty obvious one - is that
> more and more people pass it using bootcamps and workbooks as an
> cheat sheet. The direction to make it harder, complex and with more
> number of different subscenarios seems to be the only way to kill that
> monkey approach. Every new "generation" of CCIEs claim it's harder
> and harder to get the number - but the complexity of the current
> networks is growing, and the true virtue of CCIE is to make it all
> at least look simple, and remove complexity where it's possible.
>
> Narbik, looking forward to see you in Poland. They say the best
> discussions take place either by the flipchart, or by the dinner. I hope
> to retest that idea with you again - soon! :)
>
> --
> "There's no sense in being precise when | #ukasz Bromirski
> you don't know what you're talking | jid:lbromirski_at_jabber.org
> about." John von Neumann | http://lukasz.bromirski.net
>
>
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-- *Narbik Kocharians *CCSI#30832, CCIE# 12410 (R&S, SP, Security) *www.MicronicsTraining.com* <http://www.micronicstraining.com/> Sr. Technical Instructor YES! We take Cisco Learning Credits! Training & Remote Racks available Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.netReceived on Sat Mar 03 2012 - 11:06:01 ART
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