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Well, I can go through the Darril Gibson N+ practice test and get almost everything right (still weak on cable speeds/distances and what base standard does what), ditto CompTIA website practice test, have watched all 186 N+ videos on Professor Messer at least once, have skimmed most of the Lammle book, and read 2 books on information security practices. With no networking experience other than being what the average computer literate person knows, am I somewhat prepared? Im not under any huge time crunch since I'm a fulltime student and won't start looking for a job for at least another year.
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# ? Jul 3, 2013 21:16 |
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# ? Jun 1, 2024 04:22 |
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Has anyone taken EC-Council's CEH exam yet? I signed up for a 5 day course starting next week and I have no idea how prepared I should be for taking the exam.
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# ? Jul 3, 2013 21:32 |
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Woo. 642-618 FIREWALL is down. Studied for two weeks -- at least 5 hours a day. I work with ASAs but still thought I would barely pass but I almost got a perfect score. I know people recommend to do VPN after Firewall, I'm going to do the IPS exam next before I leave for the paid family leave stuff at work when my son is born. This way I'll get some solid time in front of real sensors and not have to rent a rack or anything just to do some labs for it. only IPS and VPN left. I can see the light at the end of the tunnel! Fortunately there's ridiculous amounts of downtime at work where I put in most of my studying.
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# ? Jul 3, 2013 21:46 |
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Patterson posted:Has anyone taken EC-Council's CEH exam yet? I signed up for a 5 day course starting next week and I have no idea how prepared I should be for taking the exam. Do you have any actual experience with pen testing or vulnerability assessment? From what I've understood from those who have taken it with real world knowledge it wasn't all that difficult.
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# ? Jul 3, 2013 21:49 |
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workape posted:Do you have any actual experience with pen testing or vulnerability assessment? From what I've understood from those who have taken it with real world knowledge it wasn't all that difficult. I've done mostly web app vulnerability assessments so far. I've only been doing it for a few years, but I've been doing stuff by hand and not letting a tool work for me. I'm really hoping this class is more about teaching actual techniques and not "just click this button on this toolkit and it does it for you!"
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# ? Jul 3, 2013 21:57 |
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Patterson posted:I've done mostly web app vulnerability assessments so far. I've only been doing it for a few years, but I've been doing stuff by hand and not letting a tool work for me. I'm really hoping this class is more about teaching actual techniques and not "just click this button on this toolkit and it does it for you!" It looks like it is a pretty wide scope of data contained therein. Wired, Wireless, etc. That's a lot of information for 5 days. As with everything, setting up your own lab, getting home feeds for Nessus and getting the Metasploit framework and hammering your own boxes for fun will be a lot more educational than a class. I've asked an old coworker who got his when work demanded it about it and am waiting on a response.
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# ? Jul 3, 2013 22:11 |
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workape posted:It looks like it is a pretty wide scope of data contained therein. Wired, Wireless, etc. That's a lot of information for 5 days. As with everything, setting up your own lab, getting home feeds for Nessus and getting the Metasploit framework and hammering your own boxes for fun will be a lot more educational than a class. I've asked an old coworker who got his when work demanded it about it and am waiting on a response. Ok. Thank you for the help! I'm lucky enough to have an image of a production server and backtrack both sitting on VMs for me to play around with right now. I'll have to try setting up an actual physical machine at home though, since that'll introduce some more "real world" examples for me to have to get through. Edit: They also have a pretty cool Lab setup that I have access to for 6 months and an "Open Hacking" feature that lets me just hammer away at their servers however and whenever I want.
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# ? Jul 3, 2013 22:15 |
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Moey posted:
This is a really obtusely written question.
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# ? Jul 4, 2013 02:40 |
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So after my Network+ cert my boss says, "Good job, you are now going to be our Sharepoint SME". Any good books for studying?
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# ? Jul 4, 2013 03:08 |
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Patterson posted:I've done mostly web app vulnerability assessments so far. I've only been doing it for a few years, but I've been doing stuff by hand and not letting a tool work for me. I'm really hoping this class is more about teaching actual techniques and not "just click this button on this toolkit and it does it for you!" You need to understand how networks function, nmap usage and a bunch of other stuff along those lines. I really dont recall anything about Nessus or other automated tools, but lots of XSS and sqli, as well as other stuff. It's a cakewalk compared to the OSCP.
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# ? Jul 4, 2013 03:14 |
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XakEp posted:You need to understand how networks function, nmap usage and a bunch of other stuff along those lines. I really dont recall anything about Nessus or other automated tools, but lots of XSS and sqli, as well as other stuff. It's a cakewalk compared to the OSCP. I was looking at taking the OSCP after I finished up this cert. The exam looked pretty fun, but I think I'll wait till I have a really good understanding about pentesting before I attempt it. It's looking like my idea of just taking the 5 day class and just do the exam right after might not be the best one and that I probably should mess around for a month or two before I attempt it.
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# ? Jul 4, 2013 10:55 |
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Haydez posted:Woo. 642-618 FIREWALL is down. Studied for two weeks -- at least 5 hours a day. I work with ASAs but still thought I would barely pass but I almost got a perfect score. Let us know how IPS looks; I have to choose between that and VPN next, and we don't use IPS modules on ASAs at all where I work, so it's going to be a bear to study for.
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# ? Jul 4, 2013 11:18 |
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KetTarma posted:Well, I can go through the Darril Gibson N+ practice test and get almost everything right (still weak on cable speeds/distances and what base standard does what), ditto CompTIA website practice test, have watched all 186 N+ videos on Professor Messer at least once, have skimmed most of the Lammle book, and read 2 books on information security practices. The general rule with these things is that the videos give you the understanding but you really need to have read the book to get the full breadth of knowledge. Try doing the questions at the end if each chapter in the lammle book after reading the chapter. If you can't get all the questions right then you aren't ready
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# ? Jul 4, 2013 11:51 |
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Patterson posted:I was looking at taking the OSCP after I finished up this cert. The exam looked pretty fun, but I think I'll wait till I have a really good understanding about pentesting before I attempt it. It's looking like my idea of just taking the 5 day class and just do the exam right after might not be the best one and that I probably should mess around for a month or two before I attempt it. Unless you have experience, 2 months is the minimum. Your first month will mostly doing the stuff from the book.
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# ? Jul 4, 2013 21:53 |
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reading up on stateless DHCPv6 at the end of the CCENT book and can anyone think of a reason why you'd use it? You still need a DHCP server after all. The explanations the book give aren't very convincing
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# ? Jul 4, 2013 22:40 |
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Parlett316 posted:So after my Network+ cert my boss says, "Good job, you are now going to be our Sharepoint SME". This or the 2010 version. I used the 2010 version for my MCTS SharePoint 2010.
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# ? Jul 4, 2013 22:54 |
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I've got some time to kill before my job starts and I want to do a little light reading to expand my skills before then. Which book is less bad, Lammle's CCNA Wireless, Brandon Carroll's CCNA Wireless, or Cioara's CCNA Voice? None of these will be immediately applicable to my job, and I'm not planning on taking either of those certs anytime soon.
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# ? Jul 5, 2013 00:02 |
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Alctel posted:reading up on stateless DHCPv6 at the end of the CCENT book and can anyone think of a reason why you'd use it? You still need a DHCP server after all. The explanations the book give aren't very convincing As far as I know, Stateless DHCPv6 doesn't configure addresses or keep track of leases, it just configures options like which DNS servers the clients should use, while addressing is handled by IPv6 Autonegotiation rather than the DHCP server.
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# ? Jul 5, 2013 00:33 |
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I swear, Prometric is the worst test scheduling site. I've been trying for 3 drat days to schedule an exam, and it always errors out at a different part of the registration process. edit-- I'll be damned, as soon as I bitch about it on the internet it finally works. Count Thrashula fucked around with this message at 13:30 on Jul 5, 2013 |
# ? Jul 5, 2013 13:23 |
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Ready to take my CCENT, went to book it for next week and the only test center that is on vancouver island is booked up until 5 weeks time ;_; fffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff 5 weeks is ridiculous, I guess I should start on INCD2 and hope that the INCD1 stuff doesn't fall out my head Alctel fucked around with this message at 17:43 on Jul 5, 2013 |
# ? Jul 5, 2013 17:22 |
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Alctel posted:Ready to take my CCENT, went to book it for next week and the only test center that is on vancouver island is booked up until 5 weeks time That's a bummer. I'd say sure, start ICND2 stuff for 4 weeks, but then during that last week, cram all the ICND1 stuff back in your head so it's still somewhat fresh.
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# ? Jul 5, 2013 17:48 |
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What's the content of icnd2 like as regards ipv6? Is it a topic or is it involved with other topic questions like ipv4 is?
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# ? Jul 5, 2013 18:10 |
I didn't see anything in the OP (or I missed it), but does anyone have any recommended reading for MCSA: Windows Server 2012? I'm concerned that if I buy a book now that I will be screwed by the R2 update that is pushing out soon. e: holy poo poo this is almost a thousand pages... is that regular? http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/11...s2&tag=y07d1-20 Red Robin Hood fucked around with this message at 19:17 on Jul 5, 2013 |
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# ? Jul 5, 2013 19:13 |
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For 3 exams and an upgrade? Probably a little skimpy, to be honest - but then those books are geared toward passing and not learning the material.
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# ? Jul 5, 2013 19:55 |
Chivas Aribas! posted:There are lists of Technet articles on Microsoft's learning website. I took and passed the 410 with that. I have been really struggling with the 411. What kind of experience do you have? I'm a junior engineer with little server building experience.
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# ? Jul 5, 2013 23:02 |
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I am a senior systems guy with a lot of Windows experience. In fairness I have a six month old daughter who eats a lot of study time. The 411 is very difficult to me because I don't have much experience with RADIUS or NPS for remote access. The places I have worked don't have many road warriors so remote access is always handled by a VPN appliance and not the Microsoft solution. They also pound a lot on service accounts, delegations, and group policy through Powershell. I've always used gpedit.msc but they really want you to know your Powershell. What I would honestly suggest is lab lab lab. Read each section and then do it in your own environment.
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# ? Jul 5, 2013 23:08 |
Took the BCNE for free today. I studied like 20-30 hours total. I read the BCNE in a nutshell and took notes even though most was review. Watch the Cisco to Brocade web based training they had, as well as their lab demos and practice test. Reviewed my notes from CCNP. Complete loving overkill. This test was INSANELY easy. Not only that, you only need a 58% to pass. If other Cisco people are looking to take this while its free here is what I recommend to take it fast as possible. In the BCNE nutshell Study VRRP-E section Study MCT section Study Brocade product line (Yes you really need to do this) Refresh your understanding of STP/OSPF (FYI Brocade interface IP selection for router ID is different than CIsco) Study PoE/PoE+ and QoS if you have never done it before Go take the test. Less than 5 hours of study I would say. I'm considering taking the BCNP since this was so easy. Anyone here taken that? How much more challenging is it?
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# ? Jul 6, 2013 05:43 |
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Studying towards my CCNP, my study partner and I finally got around to moving from buggy as hell PacketTracer to GNS3. My experience so far:
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# ? Jul 7, 2013 08:23 |
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Just took a CCENT (640-822) exam and failed with 788. Looks like I'll have to take it again while going thru my CCNA Academy course and if I can find another weekend date. I want to say my lack of lab know. doomed me but I really don't know. Are there any good websites besides CCENT Questions for studying up on the exam or it it just reading Odom's and/or Lammle's books that should get me those last few points?
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# ? Jul 7, 2013 20:06 |
Island Nation posted:Just took a CCENT (640-822) exam and failed with 788. Looks like I'll have to take it again while going thru my CCNA Academy course and if I can find another weekend date. I want to say my lack of lab know. doomed me but I really don't know. Techexams forum has some good non NDA breaking stuff. Besides that and maybe networkingforums everything else is people looking for dumps. I don't think there are any secrets to learning anything. You just need to keep doing reps and eventually it sinks in. I think the problem most people have is what is a pass in 99% of other tests or life situations will be a fail on a Cisco exam.
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# ? Jul 8, 2013 06:43 |
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Island Nation posted:Just took a CCENT (640-822) exam and failed with 788. Looks like I'll have to take it again while going thru my CCNA Academy course and if I can find another weekend date. I want to say my lack of lab know. doomed me but I really don't know. If you feel like your lack of lab practice dragged you down, spend some quality time hammering away with the Free CCNA Workbook and GNS3. Either that, or when you start your CCNA Academy course, jump at the first opportunity to download PacketTracer and ride that particular horse for all it's worth.
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# ? Jul 8, 2013 08:30 |
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^^^ GNS3 Workbench is good for this. Failed ICND2 today with 700 or so. Have been putting it off for a long time and was completely out of practice for simulations. Took me far longer than I thought it would. Compared to ICND1 I found time management a much bigger issue too. I found the questions reasonable but I did have a few gaps where I had to guess. ToG fucked around with this message at 15:11 on Jul 8, 2013 |
# ? Jul 8, 2013 14:51 |
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Island Nation posted:Just took a CCENT (640-822) exam and failed with 788. Looks like I'll have to take it again while going thru my CCNA Academy course and if I can find another weekend date. I want to say my lack of lab know. doomed me but I really don't know. I practiced the poo poo out of the practice exams that came with Odom's book until I was totally comfortable with all of the questions. I found that it helped for the sim questions that I got when I wrote it.
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# ? Jul 8, 2013 14:57 |
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VCP FYI: Anyone who signed up to be on the waiting list for the $180-something VCP qualifying course at stanly.edu, make sure you check your spam folder. They're going through the waiting list for the August session now and gmail routed that poo poo right to spam for me.
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# ? Jul 8, 2013 21:47 |
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I have a month to study for the CCNA, pulled the trigger and everything. Good news is... I've been studying for the better part of two months now. I think I'm going to be fully prepated to take on the exam as 640-802. YOCATCO
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# ? Jul 8, 2013 23:56 |
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How long does it reasonably take one to get CCNA-Certified?
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# ? Jul 8, 2013 23:58 |
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Tab8715 posted:How long does it reasonably take one to get CCNA-Certified? Depends on your starting point.
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# ? Jul 9, 2013 00:02 |
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VR Cowboy posted:I practiced the poo poo out of the practice exams that came with Odom's book until I was totally comfortable with all of the questions. I found that it helped for the sim questions that I got when I wrote it. I also went through the practice questions in the books, but I found that after a while I wasn't really "answering the question", but just "saying what the answer is" due to repetition. Not a big deal for the trivia questions, but I got lazy when it came time to "solve for x". The Pearson practice tests that they bundle with some of the books are pretty great and come with a good variety of questions, but even still, with enough reps I started running into the same ones over and over again. Some enterprising goon could make a fortune writing a test engine that randomly generates the numbers and corresponding answers - or maybe someone already has and I just haven't heard of it. That would have been enough to keep me on my toes past the eighth or ninth practice round. QuiteEasilyDone posted:YOCATCO Tab8715 posted:How long does it reasonably take one to get CCNA-Certified? Cenodoxus fucked around with this message at 00:17 on Jul 9, 2013 |
# ? Jul 9, 2013 00:07 |
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# ? Jun 1, 2024 04:22 |
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tarepanda posted:Depends on your starting point. I've programmed routers before... small things...
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# ? Jul 9, 2013 00:15 |