jibtech wrote: » Working on ICND1 for WGU. The sheer volume of material has me anxious, along with the unfamiliarity of the eCisco environment in general. All uCertify chapters completed. About halfway through the massive practice question database, and doing fairly well. Finishing those up tonight and tomorrow, then working through all of the Boson labs and practice exams. Did everyone else find this a bit overwhelming, or am I on my own with this?
networkfuzz wrote: » You are absolutely not alone in thinking this. ICND1 was like learning Japanese for me. It was so much information at one time and was extremly overwhelming. I delayed my exam a week three times even though I probably didn't need to just to double-check and triple-check that I knew all that I could know.
networkfuzz wrote: » ICDN2 feels the same way already and we are only into VTP. We haven't even touched STP, EIGRP, or OSPF.
Welly_59 wrote: » You want to sit icnd2 within 2 weeks of starting to study for it?
Freejole wrote: » Congrats man! Thats awesome. With STP, just make sure you can look at a switch mesh topology and be able to identify the root bridge, all root ports, and which of the rest are designated/blocking. Then the differences between STP/RSTP (PVST+/PVRST+). You got it!
Freejole wrote: » Thats awesome man. The only thing that I didn't realize (and its a small thing but it does show up on some exams/practice tests) is that the BID is the Priority + MAC address (obviously), BUT I had a question that asked me "If all settings are at default, what would be the priority for Switch X on VLAN 5?" and I didnt realize you add the VLAN integer to the default priority. So a default switch on VLAN 5 would have a priority of 32773 (32768+5). Not sure why maybe I missed that part on the first read through but that threw me off when I came across it. As far as OSPF, I actually prefer it to RIPv2 and EIGRP. I dreaded it because Todd Lammle built it up to me this monster that would turn our brains into knots but as far as the general config and troubleshooting, I really like how clean and neat everything is. In multi-area OSPF, learning the different types of LSA's can be tricky but (and maybe this is just me) it never really came up (as far as asking about specific LSA's and what each type carried) on any of my practice exams or the CCNA. Keep it up brother!