GT-Rob wrote: » Have to say, their new prices are insane. They must really be feeling the crunch. Either way, its hard to find a 5day CCNA class for $2000, let alone a 6day CCIE camp. If you live in the states or UK, I would really try to swing this if I were you.
Turgon wrote: » I fear that if the pass rates for the CCIE tracks do not pick up that some of the vendors will tank by this time next year. People are dropping out due to the difficulty and the vendors have been losing money due to illegal file sharing.
GT-Rob wrote: » 100% agree. It became a saturated market really fast. Now with less companies with budget for this kind of thing (which I imagine accounts for most people attending), and people not wanting to stress the credit card for something like this, I bet they are really starting to see a decline in sales.
Turgon wrote: » I fear that if the pass rates for the CCIE tracks do not pick up that some of the vendors will tank by this time next year.
mikej412 wrote: » Don't forget INE has amassed a training Dream Team -- and probably the payroll to match. So the instructors need to get butts in seats to cover their salary (and hopefully a nice %). And don't forget the supporting staff needs to get paid somehow. The "record once and sell many times" Class on Demand should should be a money maker, but as has been mentioned, the stealing probably puts a hugh dent in those potential earnings. What I find interesting is that Cisco now has their 360 program -- but then basically took the incomplete NMC offerings. The workbook is fine -- and I'm sure the bootcamps are top notch -- but the Video on Demand offerings are incomplete and of uneven quality..... Some of them go into extreme detail, which is good for the CCIE -- and then stop. I guess it's more like the "Paper Chace" where they teach you learn networking, rather than teach you all the networking. You take the "skills" from the parts they show you and extrapolate that into your study of the other 40-70% of the topic they don't cover -- or go to the bootcamp$. NLI is reselling the Cisco360 (NMC) R&S workbook -- but that's probably because they will become the Cisco360 Voice product developer. If ******************* <banned for spamming us from their UK office for Voice Bootcamps> becomes the Cisco360 Security product provider, I'll start to wonder what Internetwork Expert and IP Expert did to piss off Cisco. I see that as a good thing -- the low pass rate. And hopefully Cisco will keep it that way by creating a few new troubleshooing scenarios each week to keep ahead of the **** camps and lab **** providers -- and hopefully those companies will all go out of business too. The OEQ were a great idea when they were going to be verbal -- but their current execution of having trivia questions from a large (but probably finite and mostly non-changing pool) before the exam only boosts the ****/**** providers/users. The first question I tried on the IPExpert free OEQ app asked about "priority" -- and I freaked and gave the "STP answer" rather than the asked for "OSPF answer" I then also learned that while I knew that EIGRPv3 could load balance over up to 16 links, I hadn't noticed that 12.4T EIGRP had been upgraded to support load balancing over 16 links too -- so one "brain fart" and lack of 12.4T trivia study could cost me my lab in the first 30 minutes