It all depends on your proctor and your testing center.  They can choose
either scenario and I have no idea what criteria they use.  Just don't be
surprised to see either one.  Each method has it's advantages and
disadvantages.  If you are given your network you have the advantage of
having knowledge of the network since you built it and hopefully you have a
good diagram with all of the details.  The new method has the advantage
because it is what most people see in the field.  Cisco understands that it
may take longer for a network that you haven't seen before and, from what I
heard at Networkers, adjusted the points accordingly.

Regards,
Aaron K. Dixon

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Brian
Sent: Friday, November 24, 2000 12:41 AM
To: ShahzaD Ali
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: CCIE TroubleShooting Part


On Thu, 23 Nov 2000, ShahzaD Ali wrote:

> PacketeerHi there,
>
> Is it true you need to troubleshoot entirely  a new scnerio when you are
> trouble shooting in day 2? AnyOne knows about this?

Yes.  It use to be they took your own scenerio and broke it.  That changed
a short time back.  now they reload your routers/switches with a different
config all together, and you have to fix it.

Brian


>
> Regards,
>
> SchahzaD
>

-----------------------------------------------
Brian Feeny, CCNP, CCDP       [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Network Administrator
ShreveNet Inc. (ASN 11881)

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