reloaded wrote: » Has anyone used Bryant Advantage for CCNP? Looking to expand my study material beyond the OCG and FLG and looking for some good material. I also find that CBT Nuggets, while good, just doesn't cover spanning-tree or High Availability as much as I'd like (SWITCH).
Turgon wrote: » Thats very disappointing to hear about Bryant. The guy makes his living from instruction and switching is what it is all about not routing. When you host, you switch. Bryant should be world class on switching and spanning-tree as he makes his living from instruction. To be fair to Bryant, in my experience, layer 2 instruction in books, practice tests and every which way has poor from every possible source. In production, if you meltdown, bad things happen. I fear too many people putting material out there have not experienced this reality. This disconnect between instructors and operational reality is truly scary these days.
furqanj wrote: » i need train signal link for ccnp route .please give me the link
veritas_libertas wrote: » http://lmgtfy.com/?q=train+signal+ccnp
WillTech105 wrote: » Hahaha love it! I find CCNP Bryan set is very detailed and informative. Granted little dry (he tries to make it fun) but very detailed. He also no longer has those long 1.5 hour videos and breaks them down into 30min chunks which is a relief.
davenport wrote: » Not sure if you're still in the market or not, but just wanted to drop my two cents. I've got a CBT nuggets subscription through work and use it very frequently. I took (and failed) CCNP Switch the first time using CBT nuggets as my only source of study, sould have used more sources but didn't. In my defense I did just barely miss it Anyway, I bought Bryant's NP switch video series, studied with it for a month or so, went back and knocked the exam down the second time with 40 mins left on the clock. I'm generally very happy with Jeremy's videos on CBT nuggets, but his Switch videos seemed a bit light IMO. To me it seemed like Bryant's switch videos covered the topics in much more detail. I started studying route recently and Jeremy really seems to cover the topics very well, much better than he did in switch. Back to topic, If I had to do it again I'd buy the Bryant videos every time. Theyre good stuff
vinbuck wrote: » I may be wrong but I think he was saying that CBT was lacking in detail and not Bryant but I agree with you about the disparity between real world operations and cert instruction. If you've never had the higher ups standing behind you while you are trying to restore service to the core and thousands of customers then it's difficult to relate the importance of accuracy and attention to detail to real world ops. It's those kind of experiences that make you a better and more balanced engineer because you understand the impact beyond the technical realm. Being able to impart that kind of knowledge is invaluable and there aren't many authors/instructors out there who convey those kind of lessons (Gary Donahue - Network Warrior, is one of the few I can think of that frequently contrasts technical vs. real world impact.)