My advise would be to build your lab and use your lab (a lot).
You'll create "muscle memory" of the commands, the syntax and the day you pass surprise - you won't need the doc cd... (I didn't need it when I was good enough to pass).
So, if you get a vendor's workbook like the Big Brian's - all you need is in there. if you're going to be careful - branch out and look for any other sub-commands of things you know when your done the lab.
I would not spend too much time with the doc cd and memorizing raw commands - the computers in there are notoriously crappy... the one time (on a failed attempt in San Jose) I wanted to get to the doccd - the page was a 404 and it would not load. The proctor was like "oh well".
HTH,
Joe
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody_at_groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody_at_groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of sameer khan
Sent: Monday, September 02, 2013 7:34 AM
To: groupstudy
Subject: ccie preparation suggestion
Hey
While my journey to ccie number, i thought it would help in the lab to know all the commands (aleast if they seem relevant) for the topics on the blue print. I don't know if that will be any help in the lab, but what my thought is if i know all the commands i know what a protocol can do and what it can't.
Please don't get me wrong, i m not skipping any theoretical part i consider it the essential to use the commands. I am using anki for generating flash cards and reviewing. I need suggestion is it any good strategy or i am just wasting my time in memorizing them.
Thanks
Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
Received on Mon Sep 02 2013 - 12:22:17 ART
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