TWX wrote: » I've bought my home lab equipment used off Craigslist. Some like to use eBay. There are members of this forum that will sell you equipment as well. My advice, make your home setup with commercial equipment such that you are dependent on it working right. Come in off of your DSL or cablemodem to a Cisco router and build your home network from there. Get more routers and managed switches and play. I've seen 1811 routers on CL for as low as $30. I've seen managed 2960 "lan lite" switches for $40. Older 3550-series stuff can often be found cheap as it's a couple of generations old and businesses have already replaced it, and even some older 3560 equipment can be found reasonably if one is patient.
Iristheangel wrote: » There's a couple of good books to bridge the gap between real life and book knowledge. I would say that Network Warrior is a really good one. Also check out 101 CCNA Labs on Amazon. Another thing I would recommend is ABL - Always Be Labbin' There's a lot of really good prebuilt labs on GNS3 Vault and if you search around the internet but on top of that, challenge a little by trying to predict behaviors of protocols and topologies in labs and confirm it with Wireshark packet captures. When you understand it down to the debug and packet capture level, you know it better than probably 70% of engineers out there. From what I've seen, there's a lot of engineers out there who understand how to configure something and just use show run as their troubleshooting tool. Anything above that requires a call to TAC and then they wait for TAC to resolve it for them. If you know how STP, EIGRP, OSPF, etc is going to behave and you can understand it on a packet level, you can articulate that in a technical interview and it'll make you a better troubleshooter in real life - moreso than most engineers. Now I don't want you to misread and try to take on too much - Just try labbing and wiresharking the CCNA material so you don't get overwhelmed. I think that'll REALLY help you when you start that first job and can really take that knowledge to the next level (CCNP, CCIE, etc)
alan2308 wrote: » It's all about repetition. Do the labs, run debugs and watch the output, and once you've seen everything you're going to see search out more challenging labs. GNS3 vault as Iristheangel mentioned is a great resource. There's also a lot of great blogs out there with great stuff to read and scenarios to work through. If you've outgrown Packet Tracer and unable to get a hold of real gear, try stepping up to GNS3 or remotely accessing the Stub Lab at freeccnaworkbook.com.