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Comradephate posted:The trainsignal videos I've watched are pretty nice, and it's $50/month. It also will include/does include pluralsight shortly, so that's cool I guess. Congrats on the pass. I'm studying for the same test right now. Is it as straight forward as it's made out to be? Study the Jang book and I'll be good?
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# ? Oct 16, 2013 15:40 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 07:18 |
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workape posted:What do you want to do in the long run? If you want to stick with SANS, GCFW (firewalls), GCIA (intrusion analyst), GCIH (intrusion handler), and more are logical next steps. I know a lot of people put a lot on the CISSP, but it is such a poo poo cert that it really doesn't have any weight in my opinion. Only people who care are hiring managers and government. I enjoyed the SANS course and would like to do more from them however they are quite expensive so take months to process through our lovely bureaucratic red-tape and recent changes to training budgets would probably put them out of reach. There is a chance that there are bootleg copies of the texts around but who knows whether they're out of date or not. The Enterprise Defender looks pretty good as does firewalls (which we manage from a security perspective but don't actually work with.) So I'm keen on more self-study based certs with readily available texts. Because I joined as a graduate I had little security experience to begin with and I'm aware that were I to leave the company I may not have enough of a background in other areas to find another job (that pays as well or better). CISSP would be for cv padding. I probably didn't answer your question since I'm not quite sure where I want to end up, I'm open to most things at this point.
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# ? Oct 16, 2013 17:11 |
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Tigren posted:Congrats on the pass. I'm studying for the same test right now. Is it as straight forward as it's made out to be? Study the Jang book and I'll be good? The Jang book rocks, but you'll want some experience as well. I thought it was a cool test. It wasn't as hard as I thought it would be based on Jang's book/questions.
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# ? Oct 16, 2013 19:07 |
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Farbauti posted:There is a chance that there are bootleg copies of the texts around but who knows whether they're out of date or not. It's been a while but I used to buy legit class books off of eBay. Big Corp sends Bob to training, Bob gets the training, gets another bullet point on his resume, sells the book on eBay, makes a nice profit, and got to take a week off work. Win/win. I recently purchased some very nice EMC training DVDs at a steep discount and have purchased legit class books back in the day, check it out.
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# ? Oct 16, 2013 22:53 |
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three posted:The Jang book rocks, but you'll want some experience as well. I thought it was a cool test. It wasn't as hard as I thought it would be based on Jang's book/questions. I need to get off my rear end and study this. Had the book for a while but not the motivation to study Linux all night after, well, working in Linux all day I do get the impression from what I have worked through that if you have a fair amount of Red Hat experience from your day job the RHCSA at least isn't rocket surgery. And congrats on passing!
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# ? Oct 17, 2013 18:44 |
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I do CCNP-level work with BGP, MPLS, OSPF and IS-IS. Other than brushing up on STP, are there any things I'd need to know about to do my CCNA which I got in 2008 and allowed to lapse? I hear that it's changed since I did mine.
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# ? Oct 17, 2013 22:54 |
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I'm sure EIGRP would be on there since Cisco is jerking themselves off over the thought of it being an open standard
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# ? Oct 17, 2013 23:24 |
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I'm reading Lemmle's CCENT book. In the first chapter it has network analyzer outputs, am I supposed to understand those already? I can piece bits together, but I wouldn't say I can read them well. Is that going to get covered later?
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# ? Oct 18, 2013 01:01 |
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Anjow posted:I do CCNP-level work with BGP, MPLS, OSPF and IS-IS. Other than brushing up on STP, are there any things I'd need to know about to do my CCNA which I got in 2008 and allowed to lapse? I hear that it's changed since I did mine. Of those, OSPF is on the test (along with RIP and EIGRP). No BGP MPLS or IS-IS, save maybe one random IPV6 question about what address IS-IS broadcasts on. Lots of switching/stp stuff. Other than that, lots of trivial stuff, you would be able to pass with a minimal amount of study I would think. Correct me if I'm wrong, but if you take a CCNP test I think that resets the clock - even though you need 3 to have the CCNP in full.
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# ? Oct 18, 2013 01:32 |
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Agatsu posted:Of those, OSPF is on the test (along with RIP and EIGRP). No BGP MPLS or IS-IS, save maybe one random IPV6 question about what address IS-IS broadcasts on. Lots of switching/stp stuff. Other than that, lots of trivial stuff, you would be able to pass with a minimal amount of study I would think. He allowed his CCNA to lapse so he has to start over. CCNA is a prereq for the CCNP.
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# ? Oct 18, 2013 02:43 |
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Yeah, IIRC the only higher level Cisco cert you can do without a CCNA start is CCIE. Kind of the same way that you can probably run for president of the united states while working at McDonalds. File it under "If you make it then you obviously know what you're doing".
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# ? Oct 18, 2013 02:47 |
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You can also get the datacenter switching, without an active CCNA. I know that for sure.
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# ? Oct 18, 2013 02:54 |
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Oh my bad. I actually haven't looked at much off the main track for some reason. Which reminds me. I need to get my poo poo together. CCNA expires in January and even though I'm now gainly employed and don't really need to sell it, I would still like to proceed with ROUTE. drat, guess I'm spending the next month studying.
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# ? Oct 18, 2013 02:56 |
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Martytoof posted:Oh my bad. I actually haven't looked at much off the main track for some reason. Don't worry the Data Center switching poo poo was(just realized they refreshed those tests/cert) crap. Basically select Nexus and you got the right answer. I was very disappointed Dilbert As FUCK fucked around with this message at 12:10 on Oct 18, 2013 |
# ? Oct 18, 2013 03:17 |
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GOOCHY posted:He allowed his CCNA to lapse so he has to start over. CCNA is a prereq for the CCNP. Sorry, read that a bit quickly as it was about to lapse, not already had. You are correct sir!
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# ? Oct 18, 2013 05:50 |
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Martytoof posted:Which reminds me. I need to get my poo poo together. CCNA expires in January and even though I'm now gainly employed and don't really need to sell it, I would still like to proceed with ROUTE. drat, guess I'm spending the next month studying. 'Sup, January 2011 CCNA buddy. I'm also rushing to prepare for Edited because I typed the wrong acronym the first time. PurpleButterfly fucked around with this message at 18:48 on Oct 19, 2013 |
# ? Oct 19, 2013 12:42 |
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Sup! Are you retaking the CCNA? Any reason you don't just go on and take a CCNP class instead? The way I figure it is if I have to pay for the exam again, I may as well try to do the next step up
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# ? Oct 19, 2013 16:53 |
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Martytoof posted:Sup! Are you retaking the CCNA? Any reason you don't just go on and take a CCNP class instead? The way I figure it is if I have to pay for the exam again, I may as well try to do the next step up I went the first time I read this... then I went back and reread my own post. Oops. I've fixed it now. This week's class was designed to help prepare students for the CCNP ROUTE exam. My thinking is the same as yours; I want to keep my cert active by working toward the next level, too.
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# ? Oct 19, 2013 18:54 |
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I'm sitting the new icnd2 in a few weeks . Anyone else sat it or am I the guinea pig?
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# ? Oct 19, 2013 21:43 |
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Ahh -- makes sense!PurpleButterfly posted:Also, I need to go back and memorize which subnet masks go with which slash notations again. Here, dump this table when you sit the exam: 255 | x | x | x ----+-----+-----+----- 128 | /9 | /17 | /25 192 | /10 | /18 | /26 224 | /11 | /19 | /27 240 | /12 | /20 | /28 248 | /13 | /21 | /29 252 | /14 | /22 | /30 254 | /15 | /23 | /31 255 | /16 | /24 | /32 It's really easy to remember, just count from /9 to /32 down the chart. The rest is pretty self explanatory and I'm sure you can figure it out. Whenever I have trouble remembering what a 255.252.0.0 might be, I just jot this down in like 3 seconds.
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# ? Oct 19, 2013 22:05 |
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BigT posted:yeah i've read its boring....but is it still a relevant cert? I've read that its lost some of its muster, but people i talk to said, for whatever reason hiring managers cream their pants when they see it. It seems to be on every supervisor/manager position listing I see. If you're going through a "technology recruiter" all they do is run through the stuff on your resume and try to match it apples-to-apples with the position listed so I'm definitely working on getting it.
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# ? Oct 23, 2013 18:36 |
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I need some guidance. I've been doing helpdesk for quite a bit of time. I feel like it's time to start specializing more into things I'm interested in but don't know where to go with it. Basically, I enjoy communication and organization and standards. I'm fine with servers but where do I go from there? Exchange? Cisco? Lync? Any suggestions would be great.
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# ? Oct 23, 2013 23:35 |
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Organization and standards? Those are awfully abstract. Project management? CAPM then PMP?
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# ? Oct 24, 2013 02:24 |
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MC Fruit Stripe posted:Organization and standards? Those are awfully abstract. Project management? CAPM then PMP? For an example, I look at different client's AD structures and just shiver at how unorganized they are and how there no standards for users or security or anything
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# ? Oct 24, 2013 03:17 |
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Irritated Goat posted:I need some guidance. I've been doing helpdesk for quite a bit of time. I feel like it's time to start specializing more into things I'm interested in but don't know where to go with it. If you want to be a server admin - Red Hat Cert and Network + I tend to tell It techs to shy away from cisco unless you plan on being a network engineer. Its a lot of work for something most folks don't care about unless you want to be a network engineering professional. If you enjoy standards.....six sigma and ITIL are good ones to have, but they arn't cheap.
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# ? Oct 24, 2013 03:21 |
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Irritated Goat posted:I need some guidance. I've been doing helpdesk for quite a bit of time. I feel like it's time to start specializing more into things I'm interested in but don't know where to go with it. For standards - ITIL For organization, project leading, etc. - PMP If you are fine with servers, stay with them. More than enough field of work and certifications to match that path. Look at other Cisco, Juniper and HP certifications, only if you have at least some exposure to network administration. I recommend Cisco CCNA even if you will stay with servers. It gives a good base to build upon.
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# ? Oct 24, 2013 10:23 |
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AtmaHorizon posted:For standards - ITIL I would second the CCNA and recommend the data center track if you are on servers. The data center CCIE is one of the most practical of all the CCIE certifications at this point, my friends that have done it say the content on the test makes sense and is relevant vs. some others that seem to try to be tricky and have obscure content that you would never do just to make the test hard.
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# ? Oct 24, 2013 16:58 |
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I recommend against the CCNA if you're going to stay with servers. I am a server-type guy who does not want to get into networking so I did both Network+ and CCENT because I'm a cert junkie. Even the CCENT goes into stuff I will never ever touch or use. If you're at a small shop and are forced to do networking or you want to branch out into networking then a CCNA is a fine idea but from a servers perspective it's overkill. If I'm a server guy why do I need to know about DMARCs, OSPF, how RIPv2 deals with routing loops, or any of that junk? Does a server guy need to know how to enable SSH access for switch management or how to backup and restore a router config or how to modify router ACLs? Nope. Network+ and CCENT show that I know networking from a server perspective. Anything more will show potential employers that you want to be a network guy. If you're still undecided look at the objectives for the CCNA and see how many of them would apply to your day to day job as a server guy then decide.
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# ? Oct 24, 2013 18:38 |
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hackedaccount posted:I recommend against the CCNA if you're going to stay with servers. If you are only going to stay with servers and that is all you want to work on then I kinda agree. Having some data center architecture knowledge is useful if you want to move up in your organization and work better across teams. hackedaccount posted:Anything more will show potential employers that you want to be a network guy. If you're still undecided look at the objectives for the CCNA and see how many of them would apply to your day to day job as a server guy then decide. I don't thing CCNA Data Center would make your employer think you wanted to be a network guy, maybe a data center guy. Here is the link to the data center exam topics if you want to have a look DCICT.
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# ? Oct 24, 2013 19:18 |
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dotster posted:If you are only going to stay with servers and that is all you want to work on then I kinda agree. Having some data center architecture knowledge is useful if you want to move up in your organization and work better across teams. I disagree with this. I call myself a "server-type guy" but my official title is architect and I do a lot of engineering and architect type work. I would not expect a networking guy to tell me how to configure SSH on my Linux systems or how many CPUs to use and I wouldn't tell the networking guy which routing protocol to use or how to configure it. It's important that I let him do his job and he let me do mine and that's where basic (Network+ / CCENT) type knowledge comes in handy. It's enough so I can understand VLANs, understand the traffic flows, do troubleshooting from a client perspective, and tell him things like "255.255.255.248 won't work because it doesn't have enough hosts", but it's not so much knowledge that I get all up in his business and do his design for him. dotster posted:I don't thing CCNA Data Center would make your employer think you wanted to be a network guy, maybe a data center guy. Here is the link to the data center exam topics if you want to have a look DCICT. That one actually looks pretty good, first time I've seen it but again straight CCNA where you dig into routing protocols, avoid stuff like that if you're a server guy.
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# ? Oct 24, 2013 19:41 |
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For MCSA: Server 2008, is this MS Press kit still the recommended option? http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0735663289/ref=ox_sc_act_title_6?ie=UTF8&psc=1&smid=A2L77EE7U53NWQ Any other books I should pick up?
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# ? Oct 24, 2013 19:49 |
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hackedaccount posted:That one actually looks pretty good, first time I've seen it but again straight CCNA where you dig into routing protocols, avoid stuff like that if you're a server guy. The first half of the CCNA Data Center (i.e. the first exam) is all networking theory, with application on Nexus equipment. I flipped through the study guide and it has intro to IP addressing, intro to subnetting, intro to routing protocols, etc. So, it still fits in a lot of the CCNA R&S stuff.
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# ? Oct 24, 2013 20:11 |
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dotster posted:If you are only going to stay with servers and that is all you want to work on then I kinda agree. Having some data center architecture knowledge is useful if you want to move up in your organization and work better across teams. Its not, the DCICT is perfect as it skims all the topics you need to know and does look good on a resume. Data Center Techs tend to do a lot of physical layer and some lower end software work. They run around and touch things, that's their job. As far as moving up, the CCNA isn't really good unless, like i said you plan on being a network professional technician. Not a manager, not a admin, Not even a network manager of network technicians. Why? Because the CCNA dives into stuff you don't need to know or will never use unless, you guessed it, you do networking.... I have interviewed tons of candidates who put CCNA on their resume and still don't have a clue how any of it works outside of a lab. Learn the poo poo on the data center floor for a couple years, if you want to be a networking technician go for the CCNA and then BECOME A NETWORK TECH. Data Center technicians that have CCNA and don't want to move on to networking pretty much just wasted a ton of money for very little. I much rather see a Network+ on a resume as it skims more of what you need to know. DCICT or some kind of entry to mid level data center cert plus network + would actually make me dive into that on a resume as a hiring manager.
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# ? Oct 24, 2013 20:48 |
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QPZIL posted:The first half of the CCNA Data Center (i.e. the first exam) is all networking theory, with application on Nexus equipment. I flipped through the study guide and it has intro to IP addressing, intro to subnetting, intro to routing protocols, etc. So, it still fits in a lot of the CCNA R&S stuff. The first half is, I think Cisco wants anyone with a CCNA to have some networking base.
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# ? Oct 24, 2013 23:22 |
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I'd say CCENT at least is useful if you plan to never touch a network career and work with servers only. A networking background can NEVER hurt your understanding of troubleshooting and implementing your servers' raison d'être. CCNA wouldn't hurt. I would say that going beyond CCNA might not be as useful at that point because you'd be specializing in network protocols and such, but I think CCENT is more than worthwhile.
some kinda jackal fucked around with this message at 01:13 on Oct 25, 2013 |
# ? Oct 25, 2013 01:11 |
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I spent the better part of a week tracking down an issue with our phones. Root cause: a two-peer load balancer was configured for multicast, and the resulting traffic was causing dropped calls at the site. I am all for server admins understanding what their wizard is setting up.
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# ? Oct 25, 2013 01:57 |
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With all that being said, you've sort of hit on a spot I've always been fascinated by and that's data centers. Would doing the DCICT be a good start towards that?
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# ? Oct 25, 2013 03:17 |
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As an engineer, I expect anyone wearing the "systems admin" or above title to understand at least; - Subnetting - VLANs - Routing (not protocols, just the basics of how a packet gets from A to B) I have done a lot of systems administration in my current (soon to be previous) job and you pretty much need to understand those areas just for simple tasks, though you can fake your way through. Kinda the same that I understand the basics of virtualization so I can confidentently configure networking for virtual environments and assist in problem determination.
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# ? Oct 25, 2013 06:07 |
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abigserve posted:As an engineer, I expect anyone wearing the "systems admin" or above title to understand at least; I would agree with you, but I've seen way too many systems guys who think everything past the NIC is magic.
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# ? Oct 25, 2013 07:45 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 07:18 |
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CrazyLittle posted:I would agree with you, but I've seen way too many systems guys who think everything past the NIC is magic. It is not magic, you just plug the cable in and it works! What's so hard about making two computers talk to eachother anyway?
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# ? Oct 25, 2013 08:59 |