Hyper-Me wrote: » 2096 is still highway robbery. Im really bitter about the cost of this.
MentholMoose wrote: » For the VMware courses, every student needs their own server, and not an old junk one but a newer one that supports vSphere features (e.g. FT requires the latest Intel and AMD CPUs). Besides having a dedicated server, students also need their own SAN (iSCSI) and NAS (NFS) space. A gigabit network is mandatory, and probably managed switches for using VLAN functionality.
Hyper-Me wrote: » 2096 is still highway robbery.
kalebksp wrote: » As far as I'm aware you can try out every vSphere feature in Workstation 7, so you really just need a decent desktop. I'm not as upset about the course as Hyper-Me (partly because my work paid for it), but if they're going to force a course upon you it should be more in depth than the Install, Configure, Manage course. I found it to be boring and learned very little. Though I find most classes exceptionally slow and useless.
astorrs wrote: » If you thought ICM was too basic, why not take Design, Secure, Analyze (for VCP3) or Troubleshooting (for VCP4)? Those counted as prerequisites as did the applicable Fast Track course.
astorrs wrote: » Most of the courses use connections into a remote VMware lab so there is no special hardware requirement (that went away a long time ago).
MentholMoose wrote: » I'm doing ICM through the IT Academy program and the school has it's own lab, so I'm not familiar with VMware's remote lab. With the remote lab, do students have exclusive access to an ESX host for the duration of the course?
astorrs wrote: » Each pair of students gets their own host plus vCenter I believe.