This is awesome - enjoy!
Warmest Regards,
Anthony J. Sequeira, CCIE #15626
Senior CCIE Instructor
http://www.InternetworkExpert.com
Internetwork Expert, Inc.
Toll Free: 877-224-8987
Outside US: 775-826-4344
Test your Core Knowledge today!
Q: Which OSPF area type is used to prevent only Type-4 and Type-5 LSAs  
from entering from area 0, and replaces them with a default route?
A: stub areas
More Info: http://www.cisco.com/en/US/tech/tk365/technologies_tech_note09186a0080094aaa.shtml
On Apr 27, 2009, at 11:56 PM, George Roman wrote:
> I thought it will never happen....
>
> I started my journey in 2007 when i took my CCNP. For some reason i  
> was
> caught in this frustration thing that CCNP was not enough because i  
> have
> seen a lot of guys passing this exam and they did not have a clue.
>
> So i took the written in June 2007 with a very decent score. I  
> thought to
> myself.... how hard can the lab be?? What can they make me do that i  
> do not
> know already??
>
> In June, the company where i was working back then sent me to a CCIE
> Bootcamp for two weeks in Austria at FastLane. After we started  
> there i
> realised that i am not even close because most of the lab  
> requirements have
> nothing to do with the best practice. I started to feel unprepaired  
> and to
> regre that i attended the bootcamp that early but on the other hand  
> i was
> happy that this bootcamp make me realise what i should focus on and  
> that  i
> can practice for 2 weeks full time.
> I started to work harder on the lab and i decided to take a shoot
>
> I did my first attempt in Dec 2007 and after the lab i had a feeling  
> that it
> was not so bad. My score was about 70% and i have scored most of the  
> tasks.
> Ofcourse after the lab itself i thought i would have scored more and i
> started to wander if i do not missinterpret the tasks. By far i can  
> tell you
> that this "interpretation" fear is the most crap feeling that a  
> candidate
> can ever have (you do not know what you did wrong in the lab).
> The strategy that i used back then was to read the entire lab and  
> then drow
> a diagram. It seem that this did not worked good for me...After 1  
> hour of
> lab i realised that i did not even started. By reading the whole lab  
> did not
> helped me because it didn't steak into my head. The diagram did not  
> helped
> me much either.
>
> The second attempt was in June 2008. After the lab, on the way to  
> the hotel
> i remembered that i forgot to do two things for two tasks, but even  
> with
> that i thought i would pass. The score came back in and after i  
> calculated i
> was stoned (aroud 79%). My good friend Hrvoije Sostaric (a guy that  
> i met in
> that FastLane boot camp) encouraged me to rase a reread which i did.
> Normally this should have taken like 3 weeks but after 5 weeks i  
> still did
> not get any answer back so i asked Cisco: "what is going on there?"  
> Few days
> after i received an email that the result is unchanged. I was  
> complitely
> depressed, but what could i do? The fact is a fact.
> For this second attempt i have changed the strategy: i started to do  
> the
> top-buttom approach (but by analysing some of the implications for the
> future tasks, for example if you have frame relay, then try to see  
> what
> protocol are you going to run there, if there is going to be  
> authentication,
> just few things so that you do not do it twice) without any diagram.  
> I felt
> that this strategy is much better and i had lot more time.
>
>
> After this i took a short break due to the fact that i got a better  
> job into
> another country at a company which name i am afraid to tell because  
> some of
> you might consider that a blasfemy :) The guys at J encouraged me to  
> take
> the CCIE off of my head. So i started again...(this time since i did  
> not
> have my own equipments i started using Dynamips and rack rentals) I  
> can tell
> you that it is quite interesting feeling to do both vendors at the  
> same
> time.
> I started by taking my first moc lab (MOC3) from Internetwork Expert  
> just to
> know where i am, if i forgot things or not, etc. to this one i  
> scored like
> 82 percent with very light mistakes. On the way i did another 2 Moc  
> and 2
> Asset labs.
> Gys... i can tell you some of the moc labs are realy disscuraging.  
> You think
> you did it and then BANG!! the report kicks you.  Anyway the  
> proctors at IE
> are very nice persons. Because i was not sure about the score that i
> received, I wrote them about some of the tasks which i thought that  
> i did
> and they helped me understood what i missinterpret.
>
> Now the good part. Yesturday i have been in Brusseles for the third  
> time. I
> was not scared about the lab anymore but the OEQ freak me out  
> because the
> paranoia is huge among the candidates.
> I took a complete 30 minutes to answer the OEQ (at one moment the  
> proctor
> said that i am writting too much). I finished the lab around 14:30 i
> reviewed it untill 16:25 (found one mistake, and i cleared up some  
> more
> possible missinterpretation with the proctor for some of the tasks).  
> My lab
> strategy was to go streight forward (top to buttom) but try to see the
> implications on the future tasks also (guess what it si going to  
> happen).
> After i arrived home, i was very nervous because of the OEQ mainly  
> because
> of the remark that i had from the proctor. I could not sleep all  
> night and
> now, around 4 o'clock i decided to take a look and see if i have  
> update from
> cisco. I opened.... and.... BOOM!! the number :)
>
>
> Now i know that a lot of you, candidates are interesting of the  
> material
> that you should use for the preparation. After i went through the  
> exam I
> personally think that there is no need to do some extra prep if you  
> really
> study for the lab. Anyway i tell you what i did:  i took the IE  
> product i
> did it like 1 and a half times, i took also the free IPexpert thing  
> and i
> went through this one two times (just to get an ideea how the  
> questions
> should look like and what to study). After that i started to review  
> the
> materials for the written. In the last 3 weeks (think of this like 3  
> hours
> per day during the week and full weekend, so if you have more time  
> you maybe
> clear it out faster) i have used the Ciscopress and for some of the  
> topics
> that were not covered (like IPv6) i used TCP/IP 1,2.
>
> For the lab preparation, i would recommand you to visit IE forum,  
> there are
> a lot of good discussions about each IE lab that they have and you  
> can learn
> a lot from the guys that are doing the same mistakes as you.
> Also find a strategy that works for you and then during preparation  
> use only
> that one.
>
> First i want to thank Good for giving me strenght to finalyze this,  
> than to
> my family and especially to my wife who supported me so much and  
> encouraged
> me all the way, my good friend Hrvoje Sostaric who encourage me all  
> the way,
> to the proctors of IE who understood my frustration and helped me  
> understand
> what i do wrong.
> As for the future i am planing to take a short break and then i will  
> go for
> JNCIE.
>
>
> Best regards,
> George Roman
> CCIE#24235 (R&S)
> JNCIP#685 (M/T)
> JNCIS (M/T), CCNP
>
>
> Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
>
> _______________________________________________________________________
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Received on Tue Apr 28 2009 - 09:14:09 ART
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.2.0 : Mon May 04 2009 - 07:39:13 ART