Enterprise refers to the customer base that the products/services are marketed to.  
Enterprise is generally broken into segments by size,  and refers to the networks 
operated by the companies that utilize them themselves for the purpose of facilitating 
business processes. 

There's probably a better way to describe it, but I hope that gets the point across :)

Pete

*********** REPLY SEPARATOR  ***********

On 2/23/2001 at 2:56 PM [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

>Mark, Pete:
>
>I need to say something here.  I live about 3 miles from Cisco's Federal 
>Marketing offices, in Herndon, VA, and I know a couple of engineers.
>
>One of those employees teaches my router class on Satrudays, at a local 
>university, [I am an MCP, working on my CCNA, hope to test in June].
>This instructor said, that Cisco employees are usually too busy doing real 
>world research for customers, and the CCIE is not that important, but still 
>prestegous for them.  What I am trying to say is Mark, as long as you are 
>working in your field and have X amount of knowledge and experience, a CCIE 
>won't matter too much, sounds like you are at the Top of the Network 
>Engineering Hierarchy anyway.
>
>Pete:
>
>What do you mean by the following:
>
>"CCIE is
>really an enterprise discipline."
>
>Regards,
>
>Jess



_________________________________
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