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Forsaken_GA wrote: » He does seem to be taking my criticism in stride, and I'd like nothing more than to be proven wrong.
instant000 wrote: » Can I come work for you, where I can work half the year, and then take half the year off? ... that was the one thing you said that stuck out to me the most ... the fact that you can take off half the year ... surprised no one else latched onto that one. I need a sabbatical
Excellent1 wrote: » Most of the others here have spoken to the challenges you'll face in obtaining, processing, and retaining the knowledge from the schedule you've set for yourself. What I would say is that you sound very driven. While this quality is commendable in moderation, it can ruin your life if not tempered with realistic goals and respect for the fact that as humans we are not meant to be machines that are laser focused to the point of obsession. Don't sacrifice your life on the altar of work, ambition, or knowledge. I believe in balance in all things: physically, mentally, spiritually. Also keep in mind that none of us are promised tomorrow. No, we can't live every day like it's our last, but we can remember it's the relationships we have and the impact we have on the lives around us that really matter. No one is going to remember what your CCIE number was or what IT exams you passed. They're going to remember you based on the relationship that they had with you. Again, there is nothing wrong with setting high goals and working hard to reach the top, just moderate that with life outside of those things. I recently bought a violin. Why? Well, in the midst of working excessive hours, working hard to complete my degree, balance family life, etc, I realized that I had stopped taking any free time for myself to simply do something that I never have before. Based upon my initial forays into rosin and peg dope, I can say with moderate certainty that I will never be invited to play with a professional orchestra. That said, however, I can and will enjoy my ability to strike fear into the heart of small woodland creatures and passersby within earshot of my playing. Take time to live a little, that's all. Good luck with your studies.
deth1k wrote: » We've interviewed a written CCIE who also had CCNA, CCNP, JNCIA and JNCIS, he's also brought his individual exam papers, hes taken his exams a week apart from each other. Guess how he did? P4S anyone? It's clear as day light that he's cheated on his exams just to get his foot in the door or get an interview, although he's done ok on the phone interview but when it came down to do a lab he couldn't get a single question right.
deth1k wrote: » We've interviewed a written CCIE who also had CCNA, CCNP, JNCIA and JNCIS, he's also brought his individual exam papers, hes taken his exams a week apart from each other. Guess how he did? P4S anyone? It's clear as day light that he's cheated on his exams just to get his foot in the door or get an interview, although he's done ok on the phone interview but when it came down to do a lab he couldn't get a single question right. He told me he could explain to me how he'd configure everything yet couldn't do it on the actual router. He's also said he was preparing for CCIE lab which to me is a bit of a joke. If i was in your shoes i wouldn't rush with passing exams and concentrate in learning the material. HTH
LAN_Guru wrote: » I think people are missing the fact that I do study the material, do the exercises and labs, and sim and review until I understand the concepts and theory. I am spending as much (if not more) time preparing for each exam as the average person does. I am not memorizing answers. My Microsoft and Citrix lab server: Supermicro SC813MTQ-520CB 1U chassis Supermicro X9SCI-LN4F motherboard (4x1Gb ethernet plus IPMI) Intel Xeon E3-1230 cpu (4c/8t) 16GB DDR3-1333Mhz ECC server RAM 4 x WD RE4 500GB drives (RAID 10) Cisco lab gear on order (arriving slowly but surely): 1 x 2511-RJ (terminal server) 2 x 2611XM 256/48 2 x 3640 128/32 2 x 2950T-24 2 x 3550-24 2 x NM-2FE2W 1 x NM-4A/S 4 x WIC-2T I would love to have 1841's, 2960's, and 3560's but that would make my Cisco lab $4k+ instead of $2k and, from what I understand, I don't need those for CCNP.
deth1k wrote: » I'm not trying to prove you wrong or anything, this is just my advise to you, to take your time to study / practice the material well, there's nothing worse than being humiliated on an interview by having so many certs and not being able to answer any of the questions simply because of a rushed decision. You don't want to be known as paper certified.
Essendon wrote: » The guy has 17 years of experience. Give the dude a break guys.
deth1k wrote: » Indeed he has and only now decided to get certified
Essendon wrote: » I dont see a problem with that! Makes him more marketable and his hire rate would go up. Imagine 17 years of experience backed up by all those high-end certs, this guy would rake in the moolah!
deth1k wrote: » Err, to complete CCNP you are looking 2 month of study per exam, this is a realistic schedule and that's for some one with a few years of experience in networking on that level (CCNP). You on the other hand are pushing yourself with two weeks per exam or so, there is no way for some one to absorb this material and implement it in a real life situation / solution. Even if you study 12 hours a day, brain simply can't cope with this much information there's been a number of studies done on this, some good read as an example:Memory and related learning principles This principle of long-term memory may well be at work when you recite or write the ideas and facts that you read. As you recite or write you are holding each idea in mind for the four or five seconds that are n Unless off-course you have a photographic memory. I'm not trying to prove you wrong or anything, this is just my advise to you, to take your time to study / practice the material well, there's nothing worse than being humiliated on an interview by having so many certs and not being able to answer any of the questions simply because of a rushed decision. You don't want to be known as paper certified. HTH
deth1k wrote: » Not only does the certificate matter, it's how long you've had it for, being CCNP for a week with no experience in networking field means nothing these days. I can't comment on his Microsoft skills as that's obviously what he seems to be good at.
instant000 wrote: » I'm not in any way doubting your ability. As you have a lot of experience with the Microsoft/Citrix technologies, taking those exams should be merely a formality. Even with that said, gaining CCNA/CCNP will be more difficult for you, due to the lack of exposure, which you have admitted to. However, since it appears you are good at taking tests, it won't be as difficult for you as it would for someone who isn't good at taking tests. If you study hard enough, you can pass any test. The question in the minds of some is will you really know anything? Will you go beyond the exam objectives? With an interest in your success, I provide you these links:Welcome to The TCP/IP Guide!Free MCTS MCITP CCNA CompTIA and CISSP exams, study notes and forums The first, is a good general guide on IP. The second is a good site for certification exam resources. Many people, of varying experience levels post to these forums. (Yes, I am referring to techexams.net, as if I'm not posting to this site. Actually, I think this site is that awesome, so I reference it when the opportunity presents itself.)
LAN_Guru wrote: » . I know a guy that I worked beside at HP doing NetServer support for major governement and corporate accounts (NASA, DoJ, DoD. Home Depot, Ford, Chrysler Financial, Goodyear, WorldBank, etc.) back in 1996-97. He had no certifications but was one of the sharpest IT people I have ever known. He knew NT inside and out, constantly playing with it and learning minute intricacies of the product and it's technologies. Would I hire him to work on an NT project? In a heartbeat...
Forsaken_GA wrote: » Our most senior engineer is a damn good network geek. He just got his CCNA last month. I think it was actually hard for him, because he had to come down to that level, he's used to thinking on a different plane. So I agree with you that certification does not imply experience (and the inverse is also not true, a lack of certification does not imply a lack of experience) Going and getting certified in something you have oodles of experience with is no big deal in my eyes, like I said, compared to throngs that are studying for certification exams, the guy who goes in and takes the test to bolster his resume is a ringer. It'd be like me going and taking the RHCE. I'm easily past that level of linux ability, and it would take me about two weeks study to get prepped for their lab. Why haven't I done it? Because the expense of the lab and travel isn't worth it, that's not where my career goals lay. If work ever decided to expend some of those learning credits we have with Red Hat for my benefit, I'd go take it in a heartbeat, but since I don't want to be a Unix admin, I'm not going to go out of pocket for it. On the flipside, I am studying my ass off for the CCIE, because that's what I do want to do. And work may find it's to their loss that they didn't give me a hand with my training once the headhunters come calling
nhan.ng wrote: » 1U chassic...man that thing must be loud
Mind_Sculptor wrote: » Good Luck!
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