RE: CCIE #10213

From: Chris Hugo (chrishugo@yahoo.com)
Date: Mon Sep 16 2002 - 18:15:20 GMT-3


A role as a network consultant you can probably draw up good SLAs and service contracts that won't bite you in the but. This also requires a great deal of experience in the network management/consultant arena also.
chris hugo
And no I'm not a lawyer. I am a electronic engineer :)

 Chuck Church wrote: Well I'm no lawyer (although I play one on TV :), but I'd think that a law
background would certainly help in the creation of network security
policies. I'm sure they've got a better chance of standing up in court than
those written by ex-programmers and telecom people.

Chuck Church
CCIE #8776, MCNE, MCSE
Sr. Network Engineer
Magnacom Technologies
140 N. Rt. 303
Valley Cottage, NY 10989
845-267-4000

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com]On Behalf Of
tltill@carolina.rr.com
Sent: Monday, September 16, 2002 3:19 PM
To: Joe Higgins; 'ccielab@groupstudy.com'
Subject: Re: CCIE #10213

Joe,
Are you still practicing law or at least incorporating your
legal education into whatever you are doing now. I only ask
because I graduated from law school a few years ago. I have
my CCIE R&S (8730) now, and am scheduled to take my CCIE
Security Oct 2. I am wondering how I might incorporate my
legal education and networking knowledge. Three years of
law school and all that money for tuition seems like a huge
investment to leave idle.

> Another Attorney becomes a CCIE. Passing the NYS Bar
Exam 22 years ago
> was a cakewalk compared to becoming a CCIE. I have
tremendous respect
> for all that have reached this CCIE status. I want to
thank all on this
> Board, and especially Paul, for the insight that this
Board has
> provided. Again, thank you.

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