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Question Ambiguity
Can anybody who has actually seen the test speak as to which practice exam(s) the real test most closely approximates in either substance or form(as in question ambiguity)?
I have the exam cram and I bought the tcat pdf, plus I've taken whatever free online sims I can find, but they all seem to have considerable differences in their handling of material and the ambiquity of the questions. For instance, the exam cram's prep logic sim has a question to the effect of "Kerberos uses two session keys" and states in the answer that this is a correct property. I would agrue that kerberos creates one session key and encrypts is using two different client keys, so I would say that such a statement is false. So my question is if the real test is as blantantly ambiguous as this?
I've read the posts complaining about the practical value of memorization and what-not, but I think that kind of comes with the territory. What encryption algorithm that Rijenal(or whoever) created is pretty clear cut even if it's not of much practical value.
I have the exam cram and I bought the tcat pdf, plus I've taken whatever free online sims I can find, but they all seem to have considerable differences in their handling of material and the ambiquity of the questions. For instance, the exam cram's prep logic sim has a question to the effect of "Kerberos uses two session keys" and states in the answer that this is a correct property. I would agrue that kerberos creates one session key and encrypts is using two different client keys, so I would say that such a statement is false. So my question is if the real test is as blantantly ambiguous as this?
I've read the posts complaining about the practical value of memorization and what-not, but I think that kind of comes with the territory. What encryption algorithm that Rijenal(or whoever) created is pretty clear cut even if it's not of much practical value.
Comments
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OptionsWebmaster Admin Posts: 10,292 AdminI leave the question about practice exams matching the security+ exam best to others, but concerning your comment about Kerberos, it does use two different session keys as you can read in our Security+ TechNotes:
www.techexams.net/technotes/securityplus/authentication.shtml -
Optionspledin Member Posts: 2 ■□□□□□□□□□See the question, at least as I read it, was in the context of the exchange between the client and the network service i.e. Client-Server Exchange. I tried to be a terse as possible to keep my post to a minimum.
But this what I'm talking about. Within the Kerberos *framework* the answer would vary and without a very well defined context the question is IMHO wildly ambiguous. -
OptionsRussS Member Posts: 2,068 ■■■□□□□□□□heh heh heh - wait until you see the real thing .... THAT is ambiguouswww.supercross.com
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