Old CCNA thread was dead, so I'm making a new one for some advice - Should I pony up for a class like this: http://www.mckimmon.ncsu.edu/ctu/courseoutline2.cfm?SchedID=11381It's about $1500 Worth it? Yes, no? Would I simply be better off getting the books, studying a lot, and taking the test until I pass?I know almost nothing about the cert. process, so any input about the whole thing would be appreciated. I'm fairly well experienced in networking basics, so I *think* I could get away without the class part, but I'm wondering how tough it is to study it properly on your own.
1/24/2008 1:19:17 PM
im working towards my ccna and cissp by the end of summer, is that a realistic time frame? anyone know of a good self paced or maybe not so self paced resource worth the money?
1/24/2008 1:37:15 PM
I don't think 1500 dollars isn't worthwhile for any cert class, unless your company is paying for you to take it, or possssibly if your company is requiring you to get it.My recommendation for getting a foot in the door into networking certs and the industry is to intern/coop at cisco or another local networking company. Surround yourself with equipment, smart netengs, and other coops/interns in a similar boat, and the rest of the pieces will fall into place. I can't overstate how much my cooping experience helped- can't recommend it to others enough.My recommendation would be to pick up a ccna cert book or two, the jncia and jncis pdfs (available for free from Juniper online, let me know if you can't find them), and to study up before you apply and interview for any of the spots, just to develop a working knowledge to get you through the coop/intern interviews.Once you're at that point, there are more than a handful of people on here in the industry that I'm sure would be happy to pass your resume along.
1/24/2008 1:47:08 PM
^ agree ... hit me up if your ready for an internship.Just study through the new material yourself. There is also a new cert that is out or coming out, for entry level network technicians. If you are learning the stuff from no experience, that may be a good place to start as well, as some feel that ccna is a bit overwhelming now, since there is so much info involved.
1/24/2008 1:59:04 PM
i got a copy of transcenders and one of the ccna bibles (i can't remember the name...this was back in high school, circa 2001)...with those two guides, i passed without any problems (i was doing a+ and net+ at the same time)maybe ccna has gotten way harder since then (i know stuff has changed), but it wasn't all the difficult in my experience[Edited on January 24, 2008 at 2:16 PM. Reason : .]
1/24/2008 2:16:03 PM
Also, if you're looking to become familiar with the CLI or want to try throwing together a few full-blown labs, try playing around with a router simulator likes dynamips:http://www.dynagen.org/tutorial.htm
1/24/2008 2:18:07 PM
Thanks for the great advice guys. I would *love* nothing more than an internship with this kind of stuff all the time, unfortunately(or fortunately, depending on how you look at it), I'm in a full-time co-op for the next 6 months at EMC. I'm working on NAS/SAN storage stuff mostly, but one of our network engineers has agreed to let me spend some time working with him and learning about some of the Cisco infrastructure here.I've got a friend here who's working on getting his as well, so we'll share resources and study a lot. The Dynamips tool is absolutely awesome, and luckily, I torrented some IOS images a few months back before demonoid went down. We can definitely use the simulator to get the CLI stuff down and try a few things.This thread's got a good start, so hopefully others can use this as a resource. Thanks for the advice and suggestions - if anyone has anything else to add, please keep it coming.
1/24/2008 6:26:17 PM
not worth it for ccna, for higher certs I might would consider it
1/24/2008 6:32:57 PM
Those juniper cert books are located at:http://www.juniper.net/training/certification/books.htmlThey don't cover any switching, but do a great job of covering routing protocols, qos, mpls, l2/l3 vpns, security, cli stuff, etc.Good reads!
1/24/2008 8:38:47 PM
How did it go?
2/18/2008 5:47:13 AM
pffftjunos.pfffffffffft
2/18/2008 10:19:48 AM
looking at these juniper books, any particular order they should be read in? hit me on aim when you get a chance
2/18/2008 1:04:26 PM
ordering should be jncia -> jncis -> jncip -> jnciejunos > ios- I'm sorry Your only hope is iox- haven't played with it in a while.
2/18/2008 7:48:00 PM
2/18/2008 10:37:36 PM
Just took ccna last wednesday (2/13) and passed with flying colorsYou dont need to spend tons of money on classes, books, routers, simulators etc. Don't fall into the trap of believing you need to spend tons of money in order to pass it. I studied from November til the end of January (except during Christmas time) and felt I was well prepared.What you need is the drive to learn this stuff and you wont have a problem passing. I studied using the Todd Lammle book and had no problems. It is much easier reading than the Cisco press books which have always seemed dry. Study, do some practice tests, get some time in configuring some devices and getting comfortable with the CLI interface and you will be ok.
2/19/2008 5:12:36 PM
http://www.ready4exam.com/Cisco-CCNA-Certification-Training.htm
2/20/2008 4:11:17 PM
hahaAmsterdam718 could make a fortune[Edited on February 20, 2008 at 4:22 PM. Reason : asd]
2/20/2008 4:22:08 PM
^
2/20/2008 4:33:25 PM
2/22/2008 9:27:40 AM
2/25/2008 4:14:30 PM
2/26/2008 3:20:42 AM
well his link forwarded to DSL.com.. REAL informative.
2/26/2008 8:28:23 AM
Perhaps he meant http://www.internetworkexpert.com/ ?
2/26/2008 8:59:55 AM
^ yes.no, not an alias or a troll.[Edited on February 26, 2008 at 9:04 AM. Reason : .]
2/26/2008 9:04:26 AM
I would also advise subscribing to the groupstudy email list for cisco certs @ http://www.groupstudy.comIt is a very productive list of certified professionals who act as tutors, provide recommendations, etc.
2/26/2008 10:34:54 AM
I just finished redesigning an application we refer jokingly as NERK: Network Engineer Replacement Kit.
2/26/2008 5:08:34 PM
juniper stuff is slick from what I've seen thus far but who's prepared to take on cisco in this arena. cisco has too much of a stranglehold on the market for anyone to take away an appreciable portion of the marketshare before cisco just buys them out
2/26/2008 5:38:46 PM
2/26/2008 7:18:06 PM
Its ridiculous to have different types of software for different hardware products which each have a distinct and different purpose?Are you sure about that?
2/26/2008 8:00:48 PM
^well put, Bobby. I love cisco as much as the next guy. I think Juniper has catalyzed a ton of wonderful changes in Cisco. Competition (no matter how small the scale) is always a good thing
2/26/2008 8:01:17 PM
2/26/2008 8:53:10 PM
Nobody mentions Stability??? Its no secret that Juniper is used to build a lot of core ISP networks today. Not that Cisco hasn't come a long way(such as the CRS-1) in that department but news stories like this: http://www.networkworld.com/news/2007/051607-cisco-routers-major-outage-japan.html will still put doubts in people's minds.
2/26/2008 9:31:40 PM
2/26/2008 10:35:19 PM
2/26/2008 10:43:35 PM
You already claimed that it's no longer supported.8.6 will reach end of life next year.8.7 is coming out this spring and is said to be the final CatOS release. However, they said that about 8.1, 8.2, 8.3, 8.4, 8.5, and 8.6... but this time the road map does seem to end at key largo. It doesn't really matter. The overall point here is that you know just enough to almost sound like you know what you're talking about, but you don't. Especially saying stupid shit like "Juniper is a joke."
2/26/2008 10:52:57 PM
EOL is 2013 for CatOSI do know what Im talking about, very well in fact. I made one incorrect assumption, but feel free to stop being a dick at any time. This is why customers and potential internal candidates have a profound understanding that TAC engineers are in short, assholes, which no one wants to work for.While Juniper may have a good foundation, they are just simply not competitive enough to challenge Cisco in Emerging Markets. Thats where most of our growth is to be gained in the next 5 years especially with our 3rd largest footprint being located smack in the middle east. Ive personally seen numerous tests where our customers were pitted against junipers equipment for certain technology implementation in their networks and we have won a vast majority of the customers business. Juniper vs Cisco is almost the same scenario as MS vs Apple, but slightly different of course. [Edited on February 26, 2008 at 11:17 PM. Reason : .]
2/26/2008 11:03:19 PM
Now we're talking about emerging markets? Allusion to MS vs Apple?!? This is hurting my head I use both junos and ios on a daily basis, my preference is pretty obviously listed in the thread. I think that it is a viable competitor in many markets, most importantly SP routing. Lots of very large networks in the industry share a similar view, making juniper certs and familiarity somewhat lucrative. Find me a JNCIE that's unemployed, and gripes about the fact that juniper is a joke. I guarantee you, you won't find a single one.My quote saying junos > ios was dumb, more of a jab at some of my former colleagues than anything substantial. I'm happy to agree to disagree
2/26/2008 11:18:36 PM
Im sincerely not trying to start a flame war on here. I think that Juniper/Cisco superiority has to do with a vast matrix of Enterprise or SP, US market or Emerging market, etc factors. In the big picture it is my position that Juniper cannot compete unless Cisco does something catastrophically stupid.Its been 1.5 to 2 years since Ive last seen the internal info regarding markets, market share, customer confidence, customer loyalty, etc and its dominated toward Cisco (they were Cisco customers so go figure).On another note, Tennessee lol.
2/26/2008 11:29:29 PM