Hi Godswill,

Thank you very much! Your answer is very clear!

>From your mail, I learned:
1. The CCNP's expiration is two years.
2. We can write CCNP V2 exams and CCNP v3 exams mixed, but we can only
get the CCNP V2 certification.
3. After we get CCNP V2 certification, we can upgrade to V3 with an
upgrade exam.
Is it all I should know? 

Thanks again for your kindness!!

Regards,
Patrick

-----Original Message-----
From: Godswill HO [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Tuesday, December 18, 2001 2:02 PM
To: Patrick Zhou; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Is there a time limited for taking all the CCNP ex
[7:29449]

Hi Patrick,

In respective of the date you started any of your CCNP or CCDP track,
you
are certified on the very date you wrote the last exam in each of the
serials. eg If I write Routing 2.0 on 1/1/2001 and wrote the other two
any
date in between, but for one reason or the other I now write the last
exam
say CIT 3.0 on 1/1/2003. You will become CCNP on 1/1/2003 ie if you
passed
CIT 3.0 and the two years expiration of your certicate start counting
from
1/1/2003 not 1/1/2001 when you first wrote the exam.

However, you might be having a problem if the course you are yet to
write
get upgraded, it means, you probably are going to buy new books, look
for
new exam scenerios, would not have a familar exam format and all that.
Apart
from that, you will still be on course. If for example one of the exams
you
have written got upgraded before you complete all four, you are not
required
to go back and write that exam again, you have passed it already and it
still count towards your credit.

Another thing you also have to bear in mind is that, Cisco normally
upgrade
the whole certificate at interval of times, eg the current CCNA v2 was
upgraded June 2000 from v1. I donot know the current version of CCNP we
have
now, assuming it is version 2, and you were not able to upgrade before
say
version 3 came up, You will still have the version 2 exams available for
you
to write at the end of the day, you will have CCNP v2 for you to get
CCNP
v3, you have to write just one upgrade exam and that is all., so your
CCNP
v2 by that exam would be upgraded to CCNP v3.

Good luck

Regards.
Oletu
----- Original Message -----
From: Patrick Zhou 
To: 
Sent: Monday, December 17, 2001 7:51 PM
Subject: RE: Is there a time limited for taking all the CCNP ex
[7:29449]


> Thanks for your reply!
>
> You meant, CCNA had 3 years to expire, but CCNP had only 2 years,
right?
>
> Oh! I never knows that, I had thought that expiration of CCNP was also
3
> years!!
>
> But how comes, if I start my ccnp exam in 2002, while the exams will
be
> upgraded in 2003? Would I have only 1 year time to finished all my
ccnp
> exams? Even I pass, will my certifications be retired after 2003's
ccnp
> exam upgrade?
>
> It's quite a confused question... thanks again for your kindness
reply!
>
> Regards,
>
> Patrick
> MCSE, MCDBA, CCNA
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf
Of
> Nick S.
> Sent: Tuesday, December 18, 2001 10:21 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: RE: Is there a time limited for taking all the CCNP ex
> [7:29375]
>
> Well, the 2 yr. limit exists because the certification itself expires
in
> 2
> yrs.
>
> So if u begin ur ccnp today by going for 1 of the tests, the new
version
> of
> that test usually comes out in 2 yrs time, by which if u have or have
> not
> finished ur ccnp, ur certification has retired.
>
> Nick
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