I haven’t really had the time to do a daily post with CCIE links so from now on I will just call them CCIE links. This link is to a fellow blogger who did a post on OSPF. OSPF might
20k views
I’ve hit a milestone yesterday. 20000 users has viewed my blog, something I wouldn’t have thought was possible when I started it up. The number of readers has increased a lot from the beginning and I hope that more people
CCIE link of the day # 6 – Use the community
Many of you will have heard about Groupstudy. Groupstudy runs a few mailing lists for different levels of Cisco certifications, you should join the CCIE one. This requires that you have already passed the written. You should join it for
CCIE link of the day # 5 – Know your enemy
Passing the lab is a lot about psychology. You will be put into an environment you have never been in before. You won’t know what the room looks like, what keyboard you will use and there are a lot of
CCIE link of the day # 4 – Faster, harder, CCIE!
To pass the CCIE lab we need to be fast. It is important to be fast in a smart way though, we have not use for mindless speed. We need to know the protocols and in what order to do
CCIE link of the day # 3 – Join the forum
Since I use INE I often visit their forum, which is called IEOC. This is the place to ask questions specific to your workbook. There are a lot of CCIE candidates and previous students who are now CCIE’s that are
CCIE link of the day # 2 – Get with the program
When studying for the CCIE you need to make a plan. I am following this plan from INE. The important thing here is not that I’m using INE and you are using IP Expert or another vendor. The important thing
CCIE link of the day # 1
Becoming a CCIE is a lot about gathering information from a lot of sources and read through them and lab for yourself to see how it really works. I’m starting a new section on my blog which will contain a
Generate traffic with traceroute
I found a very useful tool when practicing the INE labs. How to generate traffic with traceroute. I’ve used telnet lots of times to generate TCP traffic on different ports but what if we want to generate UDP traffic instead?
RMON – Remote MONitoring
RMON stands for Remote Monitoring. It is an extension to SNMP that lets us enable event notifications when certain thresholds are met. We can monitor the performance of interfaces or the CPU and everything that has an OID in the