mirror51 wrote: » I want to do CCNA and CCNP . I just want to know if i am free 24hrs 7 days. How long it will take to pass those exams with understanding. Also i have complete books and cbt video tutorials for each exam Can i learn via simulators or i need to go some LAB centre. Thanks
peanutnoggin wrote: » I think it's typical that most people will take ~3 months per exam (depending on their experience) and the material in which they're covering... Some of the associate level exams could probably be learned and understood in shorter time, but the Pro level certs have typically been ~3 months per exam.
ColbyG wrote: » time per day / age + money invested x books read - exam cost + future salary = time in hours it will take to complete the CCNP This is the proven formula.
mikej412 wrote: » What's your background? What's your goal? In general, someone who's motivated and dedicated -- and has the sufficient number of neurons to allocate to Cisco study -- and access to a good Cisco Lab and all the time in the world to study could probably knock out an exam in a month or less. The real question is whether you could sustain that pace over multiple exams and retain the material the the earlier exams if you're not using those knowledge and skills on a daily basis (i.e., job). Allowing 3 months per exam lets you keep your day job and still spend some time with your family (dinner) and still have time for laundry & shopping for food & and a date night -- and could probably be sustained until you achieve your goals. If you're unemployed and thinking you'll take advantage of all the study time to jump into a "higher job" later, that probably won't happen. If you don't already have Cisco Experience, adding a CCNA AND CCNP to your resume won't make you much more employable than you already are. Adding a CCNA should improve your marketability -- if you can demonstrate the knowledge and skills learned from studying for the exam(s). I'd suggest your days are better spent trying to find a job now and racking up experience than studying 24x7. Do you already have basic computer skills? Do you know your way around a computer like someone A+ certified does? Do you already have the networking knowledge that someone Network+ certified does? If so, then maybe you could use the CCNA as your "entry level" certification if you know for sure that Cisco Networking is in your blood and is your destiny. Grab the Odom Cisco Press CCNA Certification Library. Page through the books -- anything look familiar from your experience? Check out the exam blueprints (CCNA or ICND1/ICND2 exams) -- do any of those topics make any sense to you right now? Check out the Cisco Press web site and look at the Cisco Press CCNA Resources page. Check out the Sybex CCNA book (Todd's book and Wendell's books are mentioned -and linked- in the forum CCNA FAQ). What's going to be your "lab solution?" You can build a lab for about $300 if you shop (and are lucky) on eBay. Or you can try one of the simulators -- Boson has the Labs that are good enough to get you through the CCNA. Wendell's CCNA Simulator (on the Cisco Press site) is really more of an "exercise environment" -- gives you the hands on practice but not the real hardware experience that Boson at least fakes well enough. While you might be able to crunch the CCNA and CCNP into 3-4 months, it makes more sense to spread the exams out over at least a year. Try to get a job while you work on your CCNA -- and definitely get a job after earning the CCNA so you can hopefully get some Cisco networking job experience so you'll be taken seriously once you earn that CCNP.
mirror51 wrote: » i also main Linux web servers both locally and VPS server for hosting sites. I do all sys admin sort of things and have been doing that for about 1.5 years.
mirror51 wrote: » So i was thinking of doing on CCNA , CCNP so that when i come back after 1 year and have certification then i can get those cisco jobs.
mirror51 wrote: » Can i do CCSP without doing CCNP
RHCE CCNA CCNP (3EXAMS) ---CCNA security.
Security +
mirror51 wrote: » Can i accomplish that within one year.
Cisco ASA SpecialistCisco IPS SpecialistCisco Network Admission Control Specialist
mirror51 wrote: » Actually i am a web developer and has 3years of of commercial experience. But now along with web development i also main Linux web servers both locally and VPS server for hosting sites. I do all sys admin sort of things and have been doing that for about 1.5 years. I am thinking of moving on networking side. Basically i want to go on netwrok security side of things and want to chnage my field.