At 01:55 AM 10/25/00, Mohammed Hakim wrote:
>Hi group,
>
>I have some questions .. or you can say many :)
>
>Q1) In order to be a good Network designer what Skills should you need 
>..plus the "CCDA or CCIE Design" ? what are the responsibility he have?

A designer should be logical, analytical, and able to spend lots of quiet 
time thinking before implementing. (Some people aren't good at this! &;-) 
He or she should be aware of the technical details of many different 
solutions and be able to select the right solutions after figuring out what 
problems need solving.

Skills include analyzing business and technical requirements, 
characterizing the performance of the existing network using network 
management and protocol analysis tools, figuring out typical traffic flows 
and loads (not easy on most networks!), developing a topological view of an 
internetwork, designing addressing solutions that conserve addresses and 
support summarization, selecting products for implementation, designing 
wiring schemes, testing the implementation, etc. (See the Table of Contents 
of my book for my opinion of what a designer should be able to do. &;-)

>
>Q2) What are the type of job or you can say job names for a "CCDA or CCDP" 
>other than Network designer ..!!

Network architect and network engineer are often other names for network 
designer. These are often the most senior-level people at companies. In 
some companies the network architects have formal PhD-level training in 
computer science,  mathematics, queuing theory etc. This isn't always the 
case, of course, but at large ISPs and many universities it's true.

Usually a network architect has had many years experience in operations and 
is well aware of configuration commands that will make the designs work.

>
>Q3) For the CCIE Design tarck or exam, is true that you do not need to 
>know  "CLI" commands (ex: BCSN, MCNS .. have many IOS commands ..etc"

It is not true. You need to know the commands for the lab part of the test.

>If Yes .. is it true that a person how Pass CCNA, CCDA take the CID than 
>jump to the CCIE Design tarck and pass it (write and Lab) can he have the 
>CCDP "waved" or both the CCNP and the CCDP ? .. for the CCIE R/S I have 
>red he can wave the CCNP and take the CID in order to have CCDP !!.

To become a CCDP you have to take CCDA, CCNA, Routing exam, Switching exam, 
Remote Access exam, and CID. To become CCIE you have to take a written test 
and a 2-day excruciatingly difficult hands-on lab test.

The CCIE exams are managed by a different department at Cisco than the 
Career Certifications. Despite some Cisco marketing material, there really 
isn't a stair-step relationship between Cisco Career Certifications and the 
CCIE program. Most people prefer to take the other exams first to get some 
practice, but it's not required. If you're a hot shot, it makes sense to go 
for the CCIE level first, since that's the most respected.

>
>Q4) Anyone who have a good drawing skills "have some good CAD skills 
>ex:Autocad ver 9 to 2000 !! .." can this help him in his work or no need 
>for it .. (as a Network Designer).

It could help. Most of the network design tools support drawing packages 
that are pretty simple though. Figuring out what to put on the drawing is 
the hard part!

>
>Q5) I am working on the CCDA right now, but I did not know why is the 
>Deign track "CCDA, CID exam" is hard from the other support "CCNA, CCNP" 
>.. !!  is it the Case study stuff !!
>As I can see no commands is need in the CCDA (DCN Cisco book) is it the 
>same with the CCDP and CCIE Design track .. But in the Lab exams there are 
>some names for routers .. any one take the CCIE Desing Lab.
>
>Q6) About the CCIE world wide any categories for there numbers "ex: How 
>many CCIE WAN, CCIE Design ..etc" I say about 35% to 40% are CCIE R/S .. 
>only a guess ..
>

I think most CCIEs are R/S. My guess is the number is more like 80 %. Only 
a guess though.

So that's my opinion anyway! I think it would be great if more people took 
the design tests and if more employers expected the design certifications. 
The idea that surfaces every so often that these tests are easier or less 
technical is based on false assumptions. Which is easier, to operate a car 
or to design a car?

Priscilla



>* For the Cisco Design Certifications .. are these books are enough (Cisco 
>Press) ..
>
>1) Top-Down Network Design  "Mrs. Priscilla Oppenheimer"
>2) Cisco Internetwork Design
>3) Cisco CCIE Fundamentals: Network Design & Case Studies, Second Edition
>4) Advanced IP Network Design
>5) Large-Scale IP Network Solutions (CCIE Professional Development)
>Thanks for the help,
>Mohammed Hakim CCNA R/S


________________________

Priscilla Oppenheimer
http://www.priscilla.com

_________________________________
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/cisco.html
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to