Thank you for your response Michael!
I plan on (trying) to get the books listed on the ccie booklist by Cisco
(though they get spendy quickly!), are there any specific books you'd
recommend starting with? Also, when you mention theory, can you be more
specific?

Thanks again!

On Wed, Jun 17, 2009 at 7:43 PM, Michael Ciarfello
<mciarfe...@iplogic.com>wrote:

>  Hi there and welcome,
>
> I would say read everything you can cover to cover.  SRND's, QoS guides,
> SRST guides, etc, etc, etc.
> Note that there is now an Open Ended Question section on the lab (see post
> from yesterday)  So you have to read theory now or later.  Would probably
> make your Written exam easier to read it now.
>
> Expereince also helps with the passing the written.  Don't have to cram too
> much in there if your expereince level makes you answer questions that "roll
> off your tongue" without thinking because you did "this and that" 1,000
> times.  Like riding a bike.  Expereince can't cover everything, but less to
> cram and try to remember when you have more roll off the tongue's.
>
>  ------------------------------
> *From:* ccie_voice-boun...@onlinestudylist.com [
> ccie_voice-boun...@onlinestudylist.com] On Behalf Of Tanner Ezell [
> tanner.ez...@gmail.com]
> *Sent:* Wednesday, June 17, 2009 10:12 PM
> *To:* ccie_voice@onlinestudylist.com
> *Subject:* [OSL | CCIE_Voice] CCIE Voice Written Study Materials
>
>  Hey all,
>  I've [all but] recently decided to move ahead in pursuit of the CCIE
> Voice, and upon looking over the written exam, I can't help but wonder what
> resources those of you who have taken it have used to study? I've only found
> one product out there aimed at the written by ccbootcamp, does anyone have
> experience with that? I'd greatly appreciate it, for the labs I'm looking at
> getting the blended learning solution by IPexpert which I think will be of
> great value, but the written leaves me a little mystified!
>
>  Thanks,
> Tanner Ezell
>

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