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Nutsy wrote: » Oy Mate, Greg Ferro, Greg Ferro, Greg Ferro............................
itdaddy wrote: » thanks everyone. It does make one a little jealous..I mean I love all the cool technology and you just want to know how they got so luck hitting all the topics and working in jobs where the technology is all CCIE level..thanks flashdumper....it is a funny name but I get it...spoof is now a bad name but it can be used for good! thanks for you comments..it would be nice for you flashdumper to tell us your study skills and share how you think, but what sucks is a lot of smart people cannot ever explain how they study or think to anyone because they are so smart.. i had friend in air force who had photo graphic mememory was sick what he could remember but what is nice is flash can do both apply and see it in his mind. that is a gift of course.. thanks for the replies..I am not questioning in a bad way just want to understand how can you hit so many at such a deep level , your mind must map automatically everything you learn from each cert...wow ..I need that magic brain pill now hahahahah
flashdumper wrote: » 1. I was extremely lucky. Especially on CCDE, randomly answering some questions.
Iristheangel wrote: » Unfortunately, no way to change the username after I joined so stuck with my poor choice of username. doh!
flashdumper wrote: » You are welcome! People ask me how I did it. And it's not a secret to be honest with you. 1. I was extremely lucky. Especially on CCDE, randomly answering some questions. 2. I had no family and plenty of free time. During weekends up to 18 hrs a day of non-stop studying. Weekdays up to 12. 3. My Employer was supporting me all the way encouraging and giving me the amount of time I needed. Freeing me up from some projects. I helped a lot dedicating my all time just for certification. 4. I was passionate and had good examples (thanks, Peter). 5. I was dumb but could absorb lot of information. 6. Collaboration is the key. I've been always studying in groups. You have to find like-mind people with the same goals, timelines and dedication. Use internet -> google and social networks will help you. Good example is while I was preparing for Collaboration. We've been studying together over the internet for some time and then I bough tickets and I sat together in a house for 2 weeks with other guys, working on it 24x7. We had all different skills and experience. I was good at networking and CUCM, other - with CME, 3rd with Unity AND Contact Center, 4th with IM and a bit of everything else. Do you know how powerful it is? And everyone's situation is different. I had enough time to find my own way. It's not that easy as is sounds and requires a lot of things to come together which make the chance of its happening quite slim, and it's definitely not for everyone. Especially for those who have families. I did realize that once my little one was born. I hope that helps.
flashdumper wrote: » 2. I had no family and plenty of free time. During weekends up to 18 hrs a day of non-stop studying. Weekdays up to 12.
adam9870 wrote: » During this time did you normally work? Did not you feel tired? I work from 8 am to 4 pm, I'm back home at 5 pm or 6 pm and I feel too tired to study. How to deal with this - any special diet or something else?
Iristheangel wrote: » I work usually at least 8-7pm and still study/lab on and off until midnight. It's usually motivation, routine and forcing yourself to do it
joshuamurphy75 wrote: » What is this DocCD you mention?
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