I'm concerned that his focus is a little too narrow (and possibly distracted
based upon the employer change) to be regarded as "the" authority on the
cert over and above someone like, say, Bruce Caslow. I'm going by the
blueprint, but it seems as if the exam encompasses a wider scope than the
contents of Vol I & II (my opinion probably doesn't count, but I always
regarded those two books as ones to read to gain perspective on routing, not
pass a test).

More importantly, this post underscores a level of description problem with
many portions of the thread.

It's inadequate to only consider the case of a person with just lab
experience vs. the case of the person with no formal/training but (possibly
too) much experience: there exist too many in-between cases where the
outcome differs.

In the case of someone with clear potential who has managed to envelop
themselves in a firm theoretical grounding and a deep empirical
understanding of router behavior under controlled conditions without the
benefit of on-the-job experience, The attitude of employers is all-too-often
to go with the experienced competent individual (all else being equal),
since they can immediately apply their experience to scenarios they have
encountered before, scenarios that would take far too long and consume far
too much in the way of financial equipment to stumble across in a lab
setting.



----- Original Message -----
From: "cebuano" 
To: 
Sent: Friday, May 24, 2002 9:55 PM
Subject: Jeff Doyle's official response re: lab rats [7:45001]


> Dear fellow professionals,
> In fear of "taking a person's words and using them out of context",
> I decided to ask Mr. Doyle himself. He was kind enough to respond
> to my e-mail, and I'm posting this with the hope of encouraging both
> "lab rats" and gurus alike to aim for knowledge, not only certs,
> and in the process help your fellow man/woman.
> I put my faith in everyone to be civilized and not bash Mr. Doyle's
> reputation, even if you disagree with his point of view.
> Last but not least, I hope that this will put an end to personal attacks
> that have become more common lately, unlike what groupstudy.com
> used to be 2 to 3 years ago when I first signed up.
>
> Thank you.
> Elmer
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Jeff Doyle
> To: elmer
> Sent: Friday, May 24, 2002 2:28 PM
> Subject: Re: Please care to comment on Vol.2 page 792
>
> Hi Elmer,
>
> Thanks for the clarification-- my definition of "lab rat" is a bit
different
> than yours. At Juniper, the lab rats tend to be the most experienced field
> engineers. Nonetheless, under your definition (lab rat = someone with more
> theoretical than practical experience), the statement applies equally to
> those
> with some practical experience and those with little or none.
>
> I know exactly the kinds of "old timers" to which you refer-- typically
these
> are guys who have gained their knowledge gradually over the years through
> practical experience. Scratch the surface of most of these guys, and you
will
> find little understanding of the foundations of the protocols and
> technologies
> they think they are experts at. Therein lies the source of their
derogatory
> attitude toward "newbies": Insecurity in their own skills.
>
> I regularly conduct technical interviews for Juniper, and I can tell you
that
> if a candidate has a deep understanding of the theories and facts of the
> various IP networking protocols, I am impressed regardless of the
candidate's
> practical experience. If the engineer is smart and aggressive, it is easy
> enough to team him or her up with a mentor to add the practical
experience.
>
> There is an opposite view on all this: I've encountered many people with
> CCIEs
> that think the certification is all they need to land a high-level
networking
> job. For me, seeing the CCIE certification on a resume makes me look
closer,
> and is usually enough to make me schedule a face-to-face interview. But
once
> the interview takes place, I expect the candidate to impress me with a
level
> of knowledge that goes well beyond what is required to pass the lab. The
> first
> three or four minutes of the interview is generally enough for me to
> determine
> whether the candidate truly knows his or her stuff, or whether the CCIE
was
> won by learning just what is needed to pass the lab and no more.
>
> All this long-winded reply is saying is: Yes, getting the CCIE will help
you
> get ahead even if your practical experience is limited. It is an excellent
> way
> to prove your capabilities to prospective employers, but be sure the depth
of
> your theoretical knowledge well exceeds the rather limited things you need
to
> know to pass the lab.
>
> As for your two PS's: I used 11-something for most of the book, and wrote
the
> BGP chapters quite early, which accounts for the outdated statement you
cite
> (and a few others). I have been discussing doing a second edition of the
book
> with Cisco Press to bring it up to date. The conflicting statements about
> OSPF
> P-T-MP is a known error, and should be corrected soon in newer printings
of
> the book.
>
> Best regards,
> Jeff
>
> At 11:46 PM 5/23/2002 -0400, you wrote:
>
>   Jeff,
>   Thanks for the response. I know you are a very busy (and sought after)
man.
>   I just happened to read this particular page at a time when people new
to
> the
>   networking field are despised by old timers who feel that "lab rats"
don't
>   deserve to pass the CCIE lab since all they have is lab experience.
>   I was wondering if you personally feel that most of what one gets tested
on
>   in the lab have little resemblance with most production networks.
>   Two reasons for asking you are:
>   1.Obviouly, every lab candidate as well as my CCIE friends regard you as
>   the authority on this particular certification.
>   2. You are the author of the second CCIE bible which I am quoting.
>
>   What is your opinion on a person who passes the lab with very little
>   "real" networking experience?
>
>   Respectfully,
>   Elmer Deloso
>
>   P.S. What IOS version did you use as reference when you wrote Vol.2?
>   Because after checking CCO, page93 of your book talks about BGP
>   version number negotiation until both neighbors agree on the same
>   version. The Cisco implementation of BGP in Cisco IOS Release 12.0(6)T
>   or later releases supports BGP Version 4 only and does not support
>   dynamic negotiation down to Version 2.
>
>   P.P.S. Does Ciscopress consult you regarding errata to your books?
>   Because Vol.1 page 417 says OSPF packets in point-to-multipoint are
>   multicast, but pages 433 and 451 say these are unicast.




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