Re: CCNA 1.0 to 2.0

2000-11-22 Thread Donald B Johnson Jr

I think if you are already a ccna 1.0 and take all CCNP 2.0 you are a CCNP
2.0
Duck
- Original Message -
From: Andre' Paree-Huff [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Denis A. Baldwin [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, November 21, 2000 11:56 AM
Subject: Re: CCNA 1.0 to 2.0


If you have a CCNA v1 you will be a CCNA until your recert comes up in 2 or
3 years from the date you certified.
if you are a CCNA v1 and you go and acquire a CCNP (either all v1, all v2 or
a mix) you will be a CCNP v1 and your CCNA and CCNP certification will be
active until your recert comes up in 3 years.  At that point you will have
to recert to keep your certification, I have not heard if you will still be
called a CCNA v1 or what.


André Paree-Huff
A+, ASE, CCDA, CCNP
MCSE+I, NET+, I-NET+
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
AOL AIM: pareehuff

- Original Message -
From: "Denis A. Baldwin" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, November 21, 2000 2:19 PM
Subject: CCNA 1.0 to 2.0


 I was wondering if the 1.0 exam becomes obsolete (doesn't count anymore)
 after the 2.0 exam comes out.  I know that Microsoft makes you renew your
 exam every couple years, does Cisco do as well?

 Denis

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CCNA 1.0 to 2.0

2000-11-21 Thread Denis A. Baldwin

I was wondering if the 1.0 exam becomes obsolete (doesn't count anymore)
after the 2.0 exam comes out.  I know that Microsoft makes you renew your
exam every couple years, does Cisco do as well?

Denis

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Re: CCNA 1.0 to 2.0

2000-11-21 Thread Andre' Paree-Huff

If you have a CCNA v1 you will be a CCNA until your recert comes up in 2 or
3 years from the date you certified.
if you are a CCNA v1 and you go and acquire a CCNP (either all v1, all v2 or
a mix) you will be a CCNP v1 and your CCNA and CCNP certification will be
active until your recert comes up in 3 years.  At that point you will have
to recert to keep your certification, I have not heard if you will still be
called a CCNA v1 or what.


André Paree-Huff
A+, ASE, CCDA, CCNP
MCSE+I, NET+, I-NET+
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
AOL AIM: pareehuff

- Original Message -
From: "Denis A. Baldwin" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, November 21, 2000 2:19 PM
Subject: CCNA 1.0 to 2.0


 I was wondering if the 1.0 exam becomes obsolete (doesn't count anymore)
 after the 2.0 exam comes out.  I know that Microsoft makes you renew your
 exam every couple years, does Cisco do as well?

 Denis

 _
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RE: CCNA 1.0 to 2.0

2000-11-21 Thread Hitesh Pathak (CSD-BBYRO-RTSG)

I hv just received this email from CISCO. Hope u find it useful.
regds/HP

To: Cisco Career Certificate Holder
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Subject: Cisco Certification Update


On September 5, 2000, Cisco Systems announced that it has extended its
recertification policy to include additional levels. Certifications at the
Associate and Professional levels (CCNA, CCNP, CCDA, and CCDP) are now valid
for
three years. Holders of valid certifications may renew them indefinitely by
passing recertification exams. Without timely renewal, certifications
expire.

By offering an exam-based recertification process, Cisco ensures that
certification holders have not only met high standards, but also kept their
skills up to date. The recertification requirement also ensures that
certified
individuals working for Cisco Channel Partners continue to be a source of
high-quality technical knowledge and expertise.

Cisco will send email reminders, beginning one year before your
certification
expires, to the email address stored in your personal information file on
the
Cisco Career Certifications Tracking System. It is your responsibility to
keep
this contact information current. To check the information, and your
certification's expiration date, go to the Certifications website
(www.cisco.com/go/certifications). Select Tracking System from the bar on
the
left and navigate to the login screen.

Recertification has been a part of the Cisco Career Certifications program
since
1997, when recertification for the coveted CCIE was implemented. By
extending
the recertification policy to the Associate and Professional levels, Cisco
meets
an industry-wide need for qualified professionals who can address the
complex
issues created by the converged network.

Check the Certifications website for complete information about
recertification.
You can print a data sheet, read the press release, review the FAQs,
register
for training and exams, and monitor your career progress from this website.

Thank you for participating in the Cisco Career Certifications program. We
look
forward to helping you expand your technical expertise.





 -Original Message-
 From: Denis A. Baldwin [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Wednesday, November 22, 2000 12:50 AM
 To:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject:  CCNA 1.0 to 2.0
 
 I was wondering if the 1.0 exam becomes obsolete (doesn't count anymore)
 after the 2.0 exam comes out.  I know that Microsoft makes you renew your
 exam every couple years, does Cisco do as well?
 
 Denis
 
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 http://www.groupstudy.com/list/cisco.html
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CCNA 1.0 and 2.0 Exam Test Software.

2000-07-05 Thread Steven LP Poh \(Jaring\)

Hi,

Did anyone know where I can download a exam test software? 

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RE: CCNA 1.0 vs. 2.0

2000-05-30 Thread Awalt, Andrew

Don't worry about it.  The 2.0 exam was easy I passed it Friday while only
studying for 2 weeks.  There is a lot less subnetting then 1.0 and more lan
technologies (ie. vlan, trunking, etc...). I got a 946.



-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Ted Nugent
Sent: Saturday, May 27, 2000 3:14 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: CCNA 1.0 vs. 2.0


OK...  I've been studying now for almost 4 months.  I just want to make sure
I do really well though and I don't feel like I'm quite ready just yet.  But
my concern is that I've been studying all of the 1.0 material and I've only
got another month left to take it yes?  So my question is this, is the 2.0
exam really THAT much more material?  Is it significantly more
difficult/tricky?  I'm just trying to decide if I should rush in and take
the 1.0 because it's what I know, or whether I should take a couple months
more to learn the added 2.0 material.


Any thoughts?  Thanks all


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Re: CCNA 1.0 vs. 2.0

2000-05-27 Thread Ted Nugent

Thanks Ben,

I'll check it out


""Benjamin Walling"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in
message [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...


 I sat the new course, ICND, and took the old test.  There were things like
VLANs
 and switching in the course that were not on the 1.0 test or in the 1.0
prep
 material.  I think that Cisco has the requirements for each up on the web
site.

 Ben


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RE: CCNA 1.0 vs. 2.0

2000-05-27 Thread Michael Munoz

I took the CCNA 2.0 beta (passed) and used Todd Lammle's study guide for
640-407.  A couple of months ago Lammle was on brainbuzz.com and suggested a
few extra subjects that were on the test.

-brainbuzz transcripts-

Q:   wl1516
Hey Todd,when is you new CCNA book coming out and what is different from
old book?

Speaker:   tlammle
I have added a chapter on layer two swtiching, VLANs, STP and ISL.
Coming out in May.


Just use the Lammle study guide and search cisco.com for the above subjects
and you should be ok.  I also have experience but the guides should be
sufficient.

Good luck and get experience so Cisco certs aren't watered down.

Mike




-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Ted Nugent
Sent: Saturday, May 27, 2000 4:17 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: CCNA 1.0 vs. 2.0


Thanks Ben,

I'll check it out


""Benjamin Walling"" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in
message [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...


 I sat the new course, ICND, and took the old test.  There were things like
VLANs
 and switching in the course that were not on the 1.0 test or in the 1.0
prep
 material.  I think that Cisco has the requirements for each up on the web
site.

 Ben


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