Fuly agree with advice on the notes. I am using EverNote to access my notes
from both PC and mobile devices.
On 27 March 2012 14:29, Tom Kacprzynski <tom.kac_at_gmail.com> wrote:
> Hello Tom,
> I found Krzysztof ZaEDski's CCIE RS mind map to be extremely helpful when
> covering all topics in the blue print. Here is a link to his PDF
> http://inetcon.org/blog/?p=137
>
> Outside of that make sure you document your learning using wiki, blog,
> word doc.. whatever.. this helps you process the information better by
> writing it down. You'll find yourself asking a lot more question and
> getting a better understanding of the technology.
>
> I also started writing a lot more review questions for myself on google
> spreasheets and using apps like gFlashPro to review them. Any minute I have
> like on a train or during lunch I can get them on my cellphone and run
> through questions like what commands configure x, or what does feature y
> do...etc. This helps me solidifying thins that don't want to stick in my
> brain.
>
> Hope that helps.
>
> Tom
>
>
>
>
> On Mon, Mar 26, 2012 at 10:18 PM, Alexei Monastyrnyi
<alexeim73_at_gmail.com>wrote:
>
>> Hi Tom.
>>
>> CiscoPress Cert Guide is mainly for the written exam.
>> As per other folks advice, you better off starting with the current
>> version
>> of the blueprint and compare what CCIE training vendors offer against that
>> blueprint. You can always dig yourself and get all the matherials covered
>> by the blueprint from Cisco documentation, may take longer though.
>>
>> I'd have a blueprint in an Excel file and grade myself (honestly) against
>> each line, like one of those
>> - confident
>> - can configure if look it up on the DocCD
>> - can stumble through
>> - have read/heard of but never configured
>> - have never heard of
>>
>> Then you see where you stand and which topics you need to improve on.
>> During my studies I would revisit this list say every month and put an
>> extra column with the follow-up grading, that would mark my progress.
>>
>> Hope that makes sense.
>> A.
>>
>> On 27 March 2012 05:46, Tom Kosa (takosa) <takosa_at_cisco.com> wrote:
>>
>> > Hello Everyone,
>> >
>> > I am new to the forum but I am glad to be here. Much like many of you I
>> > am at the part where the lab keeps defeating me time after time. I have
>> > used several available sources to study for it but it seems I keep being
>> > had by caveats in the lab where I feel that my study material skips. My
>> > question to the group would be on some recommendations for either better
>> > study materials, or a reputable bootcamp I could take in order to fill
>> > the blanks in my knowledge base. Any help with this would be very much
>> > appreciated.
>> >
>> > Materials Used:
>> >
>> > Personal Rack based on Cisco 360 Topology
>> > Cisco 360 Labs and VOD (Finding some gaps in the training that is never
>> > covered but is on the exam)
>> > Cisco Press CCIE Study Guide
>> >
>> > Regards,
>> >
>> > -Tamas
>> >
>> >
>> > Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
>> >
>> > _______________________________________________________________________
>> > Subscription information may be found at:
>> > 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
Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
Received on Tue Mar 27 2012 - 14:42:43 ART
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