Well no,  I would actually argue that right now the Juniper JNCIE is the
better way to go, for a number of reasons.  Yeah yeah, I know I'm going to
get flamed for that (and already had been, on previous occasions when I said
this).  But the fact is, not only is the JNCIE program is testing on the
more recent technologies that you said you wanted to look into, but again,
the fact that the C/S program is highly muddled and confused (they keep
changing the focus of that exam, I can't tell you much more due to NDA), and
the fact that the test grading procedure has been, suffice it to say, rather
controversial - I'll just leave it at that.  The point is that because of
these factors, the C/S has so far gained essentially no traction and
recognition within the service-provider market it supposedly caters to.
I've noticed that providers will either have no idea what the C/S progam is
and just assume you're talking about the R/S, or they do know, and therefore
know how confused the program is.


""Steven A Ridder""  wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED].;
> That C/S cert seems to be the way to go!   That's what I'd go for, but
since
> only one person has ever passed it, I think it may be safe to say that I'd
> never get a CCIE number that way.  I may go for that cert once I get my
R/S
> CCIE done.  What makes that test so hard?  And has anyone heard anything
> about a CCIE in voice technologies coming out?
>
> --
> RFC 1149 Compliant
>
>
> ""Nilesh Pujari""  wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED].;
> > Here u go.
> >
> > CCIE Communications & Services
> >
> > http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/625/ccie/certifications/services.html




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