Not that this helps...I wasn't asking for that!  I passed all of those 
tests!

Mistakes I can understand.  A 0% I can not!  Security tests in general 
won't help you for one Cisco test yes I agree.  However what I have passed 
certainly will since the CID is inferior to the other tests in this area.

Pointedly, a CCIE R&S getting a 0% on the CCNA would be a bit strange 
don't you think?  And then if you said this, "

"Having passed all Juniper, CCNP, CCIE R&S, BSCI, BCMSN, etc does not a 
guarantee that someone will not have a 0% in the routing section of the 
exam".

"Hope this helps",

I would think you are from Mars!

Theo






"Erwin" 
Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
05/26/2002 07:31 PM
Please respond to "Erwin"

 
        To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        cc: 
        Subject:        Re: written [7:45056]


"Having passed all CISSP, CSS1, CCIE Security, CSPFA, MCNS, etc. does not 
a
guarantee that someone will not have 0% in the security section of the
exam".
The bottom line is somebody still makes mistakes in the exam, and don't 
make
mistake by saying that someone has never made mistakes in the exam,
regardless of how many security certification tests have been taken.

Hope this helps.

 wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Yeah but I can sympathize with you man because several times on the test 
I
> think that Cisco is wrong.  Usually, Cisco is right on and I have to 
agree
> because the right answer is just here.  However, sometimes I don't think
> the answer is there at all or I think the question is phrased in a way 
to
> make me fail.  I don't like those questions.
>
> So far, BSCN, BCSI, IDS, VPN, PIX, MCNS and QoS had questions that I 
could
> not disagree with and though yeah, the correct answer is right here. The
> questions properly tested my knowledge and if I was wrong, I agreed I 
was
> wrong.  These are good tests.  Especially the CLI questions, very
> respectable.
>
> However, for CCNA, CCDA, CID, CIT, and CCIE R&S/SEC written, some of the
> questions I thought were more designed to make me fail rather than test 
my
> real knowledge on the topic.   It was like, I would take sometimes 3
> minutes just to try to figure out what the hell Cisco was asking.  I 
never
> had that problem with the other tests.  I don't like it either when 
Cisco
> plays English language word games on the test.  Some of my friends are 
not
> native English speakers can they can't understand the questions.  In
> particular, I don't like the IOS history questions.  They really get me
> vexed.  Can you imagine this.
>
> Router>
> Router>en
> Password:  ********
> Question: What IOS version introduced NAT?
> Question: 11.0 (Engineer shouts explictives!)
> Question: wrong
> Question: 10.2
> Question: wrong
> Question: 11.1
> Question: wrong
>
> If my router asked me this I would throw it out the window and go buy a
> Foundry machine asap!  I don't understand why I need to know the history
> of a command.  So far, only Cisco is asking me these silly questions.
> Understanding a topic is quite different from understanding the history.
> Historical questions are just silly I think!    I just can't understand
> how I would be a better engineer if I knew the history of commands
> expecially given that I now only use 12.0 and above.  If someone wanted 
me
> to do below 12.0 I would tell them to find a starving CCIE from Cali!
>
> And get this!  I am a CISSP and a CSS1 and CCSE.  You would think that I
> know security right?  I got a 0% on the CID security section twice!  I
> still don't know why.  How could I not know enough when I got over 900 
on
> each of the CSS1 tests all on the first try???????  I just don't
> understand sometimes.....
>
> Theodore Stout, CISSP
> Senior Security Consultant
> CCSE, CSS1, CCNP, CCDP, MCSE
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> "Erwin"
> Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 05/26/2002 01:57 PM
> Please respond to "Erwin"
>
>
>         To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>         cc:
>         Subject:        Re: written [7:45056]
>
>
> How would you know that the particular question does not have a correct
> answer, based on the score you get--69%-- It does not sound convincing 
to
> me.
> Even you get that question rewarded to you, it does not mean you will 
get
> 70% since I believe it is calculated using a statistical analysis
> technique.
> Even if you can get 70%, it does not mean that you master the topic 
well.
> The most important thing is that you understand and master the topics, 
not
> just "pass pass pass". Try to get distinction or high distinction
> (unfortunately, the exam grade is only pass and fail).
>
> Good luck for your next exam.
>
> ""CJ""  wrote in message
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> > Having obtained 69% and failing the CCIE qualification, There was one
> > question
> > which did not have a correct answer.  Whom do I contact at Cisco 
address
> this
> > issue. [EMAIL PROTECTED] did not yet replay since the last 4 days.




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