TylerBarrett wrote: » For me it's a matter of not having enough hours in the day. Planning a wedding, renovating a house, etc just don't have the time to study currently.
Louie1277 wrote: » I know what you mean. At work when i do have time i read a couple mins then i have staff bothering me or needing my help. I some times have a couple hours or reading but then get side track with BS stuff. it's hard even after work because I go to the gym then have a 1hr drive home. Come home spend time with the family for at least 1hr or so then everyone is off to bed while i'm reading the night away. by the way time i'm done it's like 11 or 12am. Then bed and wake up at 6 .. not enough hours that some times i forgot what i read the night before. Guess that might be killing me or learning it the right way. We are all human some people its much easier and other we really have to work twice hard to get it(Like ME)
it2b wrote: » I've noticed a lot of people here finish the MCSA but don't continue to on to the MCSE. Very few posts here about 70-413/70-414. I've been on the fence for a while about completing it, since there is so much emphasis on System Center and MS Cloud offerings that we don't use in the environment I work in.
kriscamaro68 wrote: » I passed the 410 and thought it wasn't bad. I then took the 411 twice and failed both. Most of the 411 dealt with technologies I don't use at work and don't really have interest in. I found that the hardest part. All I need to do is pass the 411 and I would have my MCSA but I was able to get in on the Stanley CC VMWare course so the MCSA got put on hold.
signumfidei wrote: » I am doing the 70-410 this month. There is a lot of content especially now we are on R2, and it also seems to overlap with 70-411 I think a lot of people think this is an easy starter exam, but actually, its covers a lot. I'm quite confident because I have a good level of hands on experience of old versions of Windows Server, and I am willing to put the study time in. I also have a decent amount of Azure credit to spend on my lab, as well as a good collection of books including the Microsoft lab guides. I just think people underestimate this exam, i know many who have started but never finished it.
cruwl wrote: » I Failed the 410 in may and june with a 662, and a 644. It crushed my will to go on as the year prior I failed the 2008 642 with very similar scores before going on to the stanley VMware class. I was close, and to have my score go down the 2nd time after studying I felt burnt out. Crazy thing is I really improved my weak areas in my first test, but did much worse in my strong areas. I really didn't have a ton of 2012 experience at the time so decided to put it on hold for a few months which turned into 6. So hear I am ready to try again, I'm hoping to test again in march, hopefully the 2nd shot comes back around by then.
powerfool wrote: » Yeah, the first time I did MCSE (2000), I went through one of the tech schools and the courses were a big waste of time, but included in the fees were my books (Sybex cert series and MOC) plus the exam fees. I spent way too much as we basically just played Unreal Tournament and Duke Nukem all day once we got through the "MCSA" level stuff (I quote that because MCSA was only just started in the middle of our program and wasn't officially part of it). Had I had to come up with my exam fees OOP, I would have probably hesitated and maybe had some "analysis paralysis", because it was early in my career and I didn't have many exams under my belt. My recommendation for this kind of stuff is to always find the best deal that you can: 1. Second Shot as a buffer (though I have used this and decided to take my first shot without studying... so not entirely helpful outside of getting familiar with the exam content) 2. Student Discount... I think it is around $80. Now, a lot of community college now have the Microsoft IT Academy courses... so if you are apprehensive, you could sign up for those (should be relatively inexpensive... I think a 3 cr hr course at my local CC is less than $300), and then you would certainly qualify for the student discounted price (which also is eligible for Second Shot, when the promo runs). The only issue with the CC route is that the courses are generally a full semester length... so slower pace than some are looking for.