I have the blue print and I showed the guy most of my notes and configuration examples for the topics that I forget. I'm back to the drawing board now, and going to reread the RFC and Doccd again to make sure that I have a solid foundation about each technology. I have ipexpert 4.0 work book and I'm doing the 3.0 lab workbook every weekend.
I thought that I has very confident configuring the technologies and catching most of the (gotch yas) tricks. I think that I'm going to spend a few more months reading and revising. Funny thing is that I work with 3 IE's, but they are not really willing to share test taking tips or ideas on the stuff that I'm a little weak on... guess its a pride thing. How to see my name of the number board soon... Thanks everyone ________________________________ From: Joe Astorino <[email protected]> To: Justin Mitchell <[email protected]> Cc: Cedric King <[email protected]>; [email protected] Sent: Fri, October 30, 2009 12:52:07 PM Subject: Re: [OSL | CCIE_RS] 4.0 lab Guys, People interpret things differently. I don't think Cedric meant anything negative with what he said. Maybe brute force to him just means something else...I don't see anything in there that would suggest he is trying to go at it over and over and over without learning anything. Cedric: Don't forget MPLS L3 VPN...make sure you print out the blueprint and go down each and every item. On Fri, Oct 30, 2009 at 12:45 PM, Justin Mitchell <[email protected]> wrote: Brute force implies you are going to attempt it over and over again until you pass without any real strategy on how to study or approach the lab. > > >On Fri, Oct 30, 2009 at 11:29 AM, Cedric King <[email protected]> wrote: > >Hi all, >> >>I was scheduled to talk my lab yesterday in Belgium but couldn't because my >>passport visa isn't ready yet (took a new job in the uk) and I can't leave >>the country until its ready... I was speaking with a co-worker (fellow CCIE) >>and he told me that my lab strategy is a brute force approach.. not sure what >>that means but has anyone hear ever heard of that method? >> >>I wouldn't feel bad if I had failed my attempt knowing that some of the >>renowned CCIE from some of the cisco blogs are having a hard time passing the >>4.0 version lab as well... >> >>My approach is the following study method: >> >>Step1 : Frame relay, Bridging >>step 2: IGP >>step 3: BGP / EBGP >>step 4: services >>step 4: security >>step 5: QOS >>step 6: IPV6 & multicast >> >>Does this seem like a brute force attack? >> >>Cedric >> >> >>_______________________________________________ >>For more information regarding industry leading CCIE Lab training, please >>visit www.ipexpert.com >> >> > > >-- >Justin G. Mitchell >http://www.google.com/profiles/jgmitchell > >_______________________________________________ >For more information regarding industry leading CCIE Lab training, please >visit www.ipexpert.com > > -- Regards, Joe Astorino CCIE #24347 (R&S) Sr. Technical Instructor - IPexpert Mailto: [email protected] Telephone: +1.810.326.1444 Live Assistance, Please visit: www.ipexpert.com/chat eFax: +1.810.454.0130 IPexpert is a premier provider of Classroom and Self-Study Cisco CCNA (R&S, Voice & Security), CCNP, CCVP, CCSP and CCIE (R&S, Voice, Security & Service Provider) Certification Training with locations throughout the United States, Europe and Australia. Be sure to check out our online communities at www.ipexpert.com/communities and our public website at www.ipexpert.com
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