spiderjericho wrote: » I listened to this last week. It was decent and helps to give the listener a good idea of the current certification landscape. The only issues were the one gentleman said the SRX100s can be had for cheap like 2600 routers for CCNA, which isn't true. The price Of entry is still high on these certifications because of the Juniper Marketshare, reseller market, study material besides, etc. I think it'll change once Junisphere is free and readily available. Olive is there but it's not user friendly for the casual sturdier.
spiderjericho wrote: » The only issues were the one gentleman said the SRX100s can be had for cheap like 2600 routers for CCNA, which isn't true.
spiderjericho wrote: » And Cisco is missing the boat on IOU or GNS3 by developing an official developer training program like Microsoft Technet.
JDMurray wrote: » Making a firmware OS simulator is a really big job. Anyone who tackles it without having access to the original firmware's source code must have a command of the full operation of the OS very well. A CUI-based simulator is otherwise rather easy to write. Maybe he was thinking of Netscreen boxes. I picked one up for $10 running ScreenOS 5.0.0.
spiderjericho wrote: » I don't know what he was referring to. Right after I heard him say it, I went on Ebay to verify it, as I was looking at a few Juniper routers not too long ago. And they were $500 and up. This is ISR 2800 and CAT 3560 territory and prohibitively expensive to study for. With Cisco, they've had their training/certification programs for quite a bit of time, so the reseller market is there for someone to go buy a 2600, 1700, 2950 Switch, etc. And I have to say Cisco, Juniper and several other vendors are failing in that they offer these "training" programs/certifications, especially Cisco which has the Network Academy Program and a robust certification program with various tracks, but no way for students to actively test or apply what they're learning except if they work for a partner, attend a boot camp (which we know won't teach you anything), college class or nebulous means (GNS3, IOU, Olive, reseller marketetc). While companies like VM, Netapp or Microsoft offer avenues for learning, development. You want to study VCP5, just download ESXi 5 and use eval editions of the supplemental software. All you need are two servers. Linux+, simply download a distro and practice on an ESXi, Virtualbox or VMware player/workstation or install on a laptop. MCTIP, use either eval copies or get a technet account for $200+. I'd gladly pay $200 for something similar on Cisco, that will assist me in certification study and Proof of concepts or testing before deployments. And I'd say in regards to CCNA, there are many ways to attain the certification, self study and buy a lab/use GNS3, Network Academy, boot camp. My point is Juniper needs to catch up. More people are going to pursue their certifications if JUNOSPHERE is available for free (obviously scaled down from the cloud version).