All, I have a question that might possibly be un-answerable due to the NDA, as I have never really seen it discussed, but I'd like to post it here, and if it is a topic that is open for discussion, I'd really like to hear some feedback. I'll assume silence to mean "I could tell you, but I'd have to kill you." Here goes....
What is the structure of the lab exam? By this, I mean do they hand you a book at the beginning of the day and say "make the network look like this and do that" and let you bang away until you are finished configuring all of the testable technologies (or run out of time, heaven forbid), or do they break it into sections, where they say configure the network to do these certain things, then you stop, they grade you up to that point, then you 'write erase | reload' and move on to the next set of taskings (or something in between). Also, how many devices are in the racks? Are there so many devices that you actually have enough interfaces to configure routing, IRB, CRB, RSRB, DLSw+, Frame, HDLC, PPP, ISDN, etc., etc., all at the same time and not run out of interfaces? I guess what I'm trying to do is remove some of the fog that shrouds the top of the certification mountain so I can find the best path to the top. Any feedback from people who have taken the lab exam, and feel within their bounds talking about it, please respond. Thanks. Kelly Cobean, CCNP, CCSA, ACSA, MCSE, MCP+I Network Engineer AT&T Government Solutions, Inc. Message Posted at: http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7&i=45468&t=45468 -------------------------------------------------- FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/cisco.html Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

