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Eildor wrote: » I have ICND1 and ICND2 by Wendell Odom, but haven't been able to read through them yet. I have to complete CCNA 1, 2, 3, and 4 of Network Fundamentals as part of my degree. I have completed CCNA1, CCNA2, planning to take CCNA3 next week, and CCNA4 the week after. Then I can start on ICND1 and ICND2. I feel as if the Network Fundamentals books contain too much information. Sure, the more you know the better but some of the information in there I can't for the life of me understand the use for in the real world. In a network technician job role is learning about things like LCP and NCP going to be useful? I know it's part of CCNA so I'm having to read into these things, but after becoming a CCNA, is knowing about LCP and NCP going to help me configure/troubleshoot a WAN? Is knowing how many DS0's there are in a T1 connection going to be useful to me in getting a job? I don't think it is, but I don't know very much so I'd like to know what some of you experienced guys think. This is a genuine question by the way
fslima0 wrote: » How are you going to troubleshoot something you don't know about? that's why you need to know the difference between LCP or NCP, for instance. I must say these little facts are very easy to forget when you are not dealing with them on a daily basis (makes me want to study the PPP protocol). You need to know what they are for at some point...
Eildor wrote: » That's what I'm worried about... spending time memorizing information for CCNA and then forgetting what I have learnt later, or finding no use for the information.
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