Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Narbik Kocharians CCIE Bootcamp Day 1

First day :-). Went to TrainPro (http://www.trainpro.com.my) at about 0845hrs (GMT +8 since the bootcamp is in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia). Narbik wasn't here yet but Yap, the ever-friendly owner of TrainPro told me that Narbik will be here before 0900hrs ;-). Set up my work laptop (trying not to go through the abundance of e-mails that I have missed as I was in Athens, Greece the previous work for project management work). As I was surfing the net for awhile ...

POOF! Narbik with his magician hat appeared out of nowhere and started to greet us in a warm smile. He asked us to give us a brief introduction of ourselves, where are we from, what are our preparations for his bootcamp, our lab dates if any, where we heard of his bootcamp and the occasional one or two jokes that came in between. By the way, his grandmother still has two CCIEs for those who wonder and is probably working hard to get her CCDE ;-).

Ok serious stuff now. Narbik started with telling us he will NOT use a projector. He instead will use a whiteboard utilizing the old school-style of 'chalk talk'. He emphasizes that this is the most efficient way of getting information into a person and I totally agree. Projector slides make me sleepy to be honest hence this is really a refreshing idea for me. Narbik also says that he teaches, he does not lecture and to me this is an important fact as he with regards to this, he stressed that we are all network engineers, we would be bored with the theoritical stuff and instead would love to see something practical. Don't we all feel like that? ;-)

Narbik gave us the laydown on the schedule for the week. We will be covering switching and frame-relay on day 1 with the usual labbing on some times of the day. OSPF and EIGRP will come on day 2. Day 3 will the one of the most intense with BGP taking the whole day. Day 4 will cover multicasting and QoS and finally Day 5 we would be spending it on RIPv2 and probably he will end it up with some lab strategies. We have about 15 participants and three of them will be taking their CCIE exams next month (mobile lab in Singapore).

For today (or yesterday since I am typing this in the morning of Day 2), Narbik gotten us to do lab work in the morning and after lunch he will teach us about switching from the security aspect (QoS will be on Day 4). He expects us to know basic switching and with that, he will not be teaching stuff such as "What is a VLAN", "What is VTP", "How do you create VLANs" and other basic stuff like that. Instead, he will be concentrating more on improving and strengthening our core knowledge in switching and to add "007" tricks of the trade as he called it to our arsenal of weapons when we face the CCIE exam in the future.

I had the pleasure of having lunch with Narbik. We ate Japanese food at Sushi King and we talked about stuff such as the economic situation in Malaysia, salary range in Malaysia, etc. We also talked about the CCIE market in Malaysia and we talked about Emannuel Conde (dude when are you coming to Malaysia to do a talk on CCIE recruitment? ;-)), Ethan Banks, Josh Atterbury, Darby Weaver, Arden Packeer, Lessaid, Blindhog (the other Josh ;-)) and all of you other people who have been guiding and walking with me on this yet-to-end journey (don't flame me if I didn't put your names here. I was writing this out of pure memory which Narbik nearly killed last night). Narbik insisted that he payed for lunch and we made a deal that I will treat him when I reattend his planned R&S bootcamp again in October 2009 (I might attempt the lab before then but who knows ;-)).

After lunch, Narbik started teaching on the switching class. Narbik gave his very famous quote today "IOS DOES NOT LIE" while proving a few proof of concepts on how this applies when we configure stuff. Narbik also encourages us by telling us even if we fail the test the first time, at least we know how it feels. He told us that it was easy to misintepret questions with him failing the first time as well. He also told us that he took the CCIE because he was told that he has to be a CCIE in order to teach CCIE courses (he still grins at this). Narbik ended today's class telling us we will be CCIEs IF we really want to be and even if we are not CCIEs or don't plan to take the CCIE class, we will be better engineers by understanding the technologies within the CCIE blueprint.

After this, I went home, talked a little with my wife and then I was snoring on the bed (of course I took a shower before then). Onwards to Day 2. Bring it on Narbik!!!

By the way, we are already using his Advanced CCIE Routing & Switching Workbook 2.0 for this bootcamp. Narbik also gave us a sneak preview of his upcoming and updated materials. He will not be touching the CCIE R&S 4.0 blueprint at this point since it is still 4-5 months away (besides only MPLS and layer 3 VPN is added to the blueprint). He prefers us to understand and dig into 3.0 and not worry about 4.0 just yet.

I will be adding pictures when I complete this bootcamp. That's just because I prefer not to pay RM 60/day for Internet access at the hotel I am staying (Cititel-RM 225/night).

Update: Some pictures while I was taking a break during lunch to update this post.

This is the class I was in. Look at the whiteboard. All Narbik's work :-). There are NO projectors. You can attend his class if you don't believe it.
My personal copy of Narbik's workbooks. It has my name on it as a watermark. This is one of those rare cases where people actually spell my name correctly.
These are the workbooks in its full glory. Imagine when a person walks into Narbik's camp thinking that it's going to be easy to attend his class with a few labs to do and that's it. Boy ... are they going to be surprised with the amount of depth and information they have to master in Narbik's workbooks.
And here's the man himself, secret agent 007 Narbik Kocharians :-). I got him to pose like this believing that he was going to be nominated for the Grammy Awards 2009 (but little does he know he is being tricked).

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Blog Post in Progress

I just wanted to reserve this date for posting since it's a special day for me. Be right back with updates soon.

Saturday, May 9, 2009

CCIE R&S v4.0

A few more topics like MPLS is added to the list of technologies to be learned for the CCIE exam. Not a big deal really since quite a number of community groups/vendors have been anticipating this. I guess the biggest change would be the 2-hours troubleshooting section of the CCIE lab. You will need to ace this part in addition to the remaining 6-hours configuration part of the lab to earn your CCIE. Of course, not forgetting that you'll also need to pass the new CCIE written exam(351-001) and also the MEQ (multiple exam questions) section before the lab. So all in all, you need to pass 4 ... yes folks that's FOUR sections before earning the CCIE. Looks like the R&S is getting tougher and tougher but the good point is the exam is trying to mirror real-world issues nowadays (you'll get real world issues trouble tickets for the troubleshooting section of the lab). Oh yeah, and this will only happen in October 2009 when Cisco retires the old v3.0 exam so that's like erm 4 more months to prepare? Not enough of time if you ask me unless you can pull it off in a shorter time like Tassos :-).

For more information of the change in the CCIE R&S v4.0 exam, point your browser to http://ciscocert.custhelp.com/rd?1=AvUG~wrMDv8SzkDpGhse~yL~Jvkq~4z~yrv23jr~&2=2502.

Scott Morris also has a guest article which you can find directly at https://cisco.hosted.jivesoftware.com/docs/DOC-4888.

I am also in the midst of finishing an article for the May edition of the CCIE Flyer. I know that some of you e-mailed me about having physical switches working with Dynamips/GNS3. I will try to finish that article soon on my blog or in a future article on the CCIE Flyer.

Last but not least, I have updated my list of bloggers on the CCIE/CCNP/CCDE/CCwhatever run. Please give them support. It's not easy chasing after a certification when you battle your time with family, work and yes a dose of Wiresharking now and then ;-).

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Internetwork Expert's Core Knowlege Simulation and CCIE Written Video-on-Demand / IPExpert's Core Knowledge Quizzer

In case some of you didn't know, CCIE Flyer April edition is out at http://www.ccieflyer.com. This time I wrote an article on how the iPhone 3G is assisting me in my CCIE studies.

Following Internetwork Expert's Core Knowledge Simulation which is free if you're an end-to-end package customer (this is a product which simulates the open-ended questions which CCIE candidates need to answer before stepping in to configure the lab), IPExpert wil be releasing it's own Core Knowledge Quizzer which will be a *FREE* product as shown at http://www.sunpenguin.net/?p=580.

FYI, Internetwork Expert is also in the process of completing the CCIE written VoD authored by Anthony Sequiera (http://www.internetworkexpert.com/rscciewritten.htm). I personally have just purchased this product (barely hours ago) and on the web, it says that it will be fully released in July 2009. There are some sample chapters available on Internetwork Expert's blog so check them out. This should serve as another excellent resource if you are like me, studying for the CCIE written exam (in addition to the Official Examination Guide by Cisco Press and few other books).

Oh and CCIE numbers have hit 24xxx ;-)

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Narbik Kocharians R&S Bootcamp

Currently working on a non-technical article that involves CCIE and iPhone ... let's hope I finish it very soon to be submitted.

Study-wise, I am left again with almost stars in my eyes when reading on redistribution and multicast. Probably QoS too but the others are fine ;-). Let's see what happens in the next few days.

I will be attending Narbik Kocharian's CCIE R&S bootcamp from June 1 to June 5 2009. This bootcamp will be hosted by TrainPro Academy situated in Mid Valley Malaysia (their webpage is at http://www.trainpro.com.my/). I will be of course writing a review on the bootcamp after finished attending it as I believe a majority of my time which is from 0900hrs to 2100hrs will be listening to his lecture and catching some sleep in-between and not forgetting lunch or dinner to that matter! I will be staying in a hotel (rather strange to live currently in Malaysia and yet rent a hotel) since I figure that it would be a waste of time for me to actually spend time travelling back and forth to my house instead of spending time on labs ;-).

For those who doesn't know Narbik, he is a router God. His method of teaching from what I have read and heard involves only the whiteboard or should I say blackboard with chalks. He has a built-in IOS in him and he spits out commands with their options before you can finish typing them! How cool is that??? I am waiting for Navett's review on his bootcamp since he is taking it in April 2009. You can also find excellent reviews on Narbik's bootcamp at CCIE Candidate's webpage and also at EDFNetwork's webpage (of course there are a few other really cool reviews as well but I seem to forgot since I am typing this by memory). For those who wants to go straight to Narbik's bootcamp page, please visit http://www.micronicstraining.com/ccie-routing-switching-lab.html and you'll get more information there. It even comes with hotel accomodation information ;-).

Saturday, February 28, 2009

March 2009 Tidbits

Both IPExpert and Internetwork Expert have came up with updates to their materials for some of the tracks. Also they are offering nice discounts on their products as well. By the way, some of you might not know that recently Internetwork Expert's website can be accessible by http://www.ine.com (this is perhaps it's easier to type INE rather than the whole name ;-)).

CCIE numbers have hit 236xx for those who actually follow the numbers of CCIEs worldwide.

Just in case some of you didn't know, CCIE Flyer March edition is out at http://www.ccieflyer.com. Get it while it's hot :-).

I am still working on my CCIE written ... looks like I am three months behind schedule already but isn't it better to pass the exam on the first time? :-). I got a little side-tracked by learning to use Wireshark in depth. I am hoping one day Sharkfest comes to Asia (it might as indicated by Laura Chappell to me in a mail).

Friday, February 6, 2009

IPExpert Offers Non-CCIE Courses

It looks like it is finally and officially announced. IPExpert (ok so I prefer to put the 'E' in capital ;-)) will be offering courses that are non-CCIE but instead focusing on the lower certifications like the CCNA, CCNP and a host of other certifications which are not Cisco-centric.

I have included the official announcement from IPExpert's blog at http://ipexpert.ccieblog.com/2009/02/05/ipexpert-inc-plans-to-launch-sister-company-ipexpert-training-inc-focusing-on-the-lower-level-certification-training-market/.

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IPexpert, Inc. Plans to Launch Sister Company - “IPexpert Training, Inc.” Focusing on the Lower-Level Certification Training Market

By Wayne Lawson II on Thursday, February 5, 2009 12:25

IPexpert Followers,

I thought I’d give all of you a “heads up” before our official site launches and the PR goes out (in approximately 2 to 3 weeks). We have been working diligently on analyzing the lower-level training space (over 1 year in the making) and have put together various classes and offerings that - we feel - will set us apart from the competition in that lower-level market (We did it - and did it well - with the hardest certification on the market - so I am confident that we can do so in this lower-level space!). Over the next few months you’ll begin seeing the following:

  • A separate brand named “IPexpert Training” (at www.IPexpertTraining.com) that will be focused on CompTia, VMWare, CCENT, CCNA, CCDA, CCNP, CCSP, CCVP and MCSE training products.
  • These classes / products will include self-study materials (Blended Learning), lab workbooks, Audio, Video on Demand, eBooks, quizzers, iPhone applications, ILT (traditional classroom-based training), online mentoring and online training classes - and will be priced very competitively. Students taking these classes will be eligible for a *significant* discount on all IPexpert, Inc. CCIE lab products as that will be their next progression (eventually). These classes will be delivered during the week - as our CCIE Lab classes are (from IPexpert) - however, we will also have weekend and even classes available online and at various locations.
  • An online community for these students.
  • A new blog for these students with industry experts (the IPexpert Training instructors and developers).
  • Proctor Labs vRack rental for these certifications (Cisco and Microsoft - VMWare down the road in Q2).

Here are a few things for you to know:

  • The IPexpert CCIE Team will not be participating in this initiative. We have created a 2nd “sister company” to leverage the IPexpert brand, however - our CCIE Lab efforts will not be diluted and our CCIE Instructors will remain focused on CCIE Lab training, product development and support. The IPexpert Training developers and instructors are different individuals who have already proven themselves in this different (lower-level) market.
  • There will be different websites, different communities and different “legal companies”. However, the management team and sales team will remain the same - giving you sales reps that understand technology and management that understands how to deliver a phenomenal product and ensure a successful delivery with a high customer satisfaction rating.
  • These classes will *NOT* be Cisco authorized and neither business unit will endorse or offer the Cisco 360 CCIE Lab offering. After understanding the 360 program, products and Cisco’s initiative - I have made the decision that the current CCIE Lab offerings we have (already shipping) are much more mature, proven, more up-to-date and more cost-effective for our clients.

Here’s how you can stay informed:

Follow IPexpert Training, Inc. on Twitter.

Join the IPexpert Training Facebook group.

Visit the IPexpert Training website and enter your email address - you will be notified of the site launch and will receive monthly news and product specials for that business entity.

More to come soon!

Thanks! - Wayne

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With the latest offering from IPExpert, I am sure we are going to see a handful of non-CCIE courses from other CCIE training companies very soon. Let's hope all the prices are affordable to all of us in this current economy crisis. Now who wants to sponsor me for my written and lab? :-)

Saturday, January 31, 2009

Lunar New Year and some tidbits ...

Happy Lunar New Year to those who are celebrating it. I still have one more day here in the land of "hard to get Internet for me since I don't have a ADSL signal at my hometown" but after getting access from a 'friend' here, checked a few of the hundreds of my personal and work mails, one mail caught my attention. I have received news that Joshua Atterbury, a fellow CCIE candidate (now a holder no longer a candidate ;-)) has passed his CCIE in R&S!

Please head over to http://joshatterbury.com and congratulate him and you can send me free beer if you like to celebrate with him :-).

Also CCIE Flyer January 2009 edition is now out. Get it at http://www.ccieflyer.com and read up on the many interesting articles there. Feel free to comment on my article if you liked/disliked it and how I can improve on my probably lame writing skills :-)

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Open-Ended Questions for the CCIE

As some of you might have known, there will be an open-ended question exam for CCIE candidates before they step into the room for the lab exam. This is nothing new to be honest as the lab location in Beijing had this as a pilot project a few months ago. This is an attempt to filter out the well-prepared candidates and probably an attempt to filter out the dumpsters (as I have written in the CCIE Flyer in December 2008).

From the Learning@Cisco newsletter,

Changes to CCIE Lab and Written Exam Question Format and Scoring

Effective February 1, 2009, Cisco will introduce a new type of question format to CCIE Routing and Switching lab exams. In addition to the live configuration scenarios, candidates will be asked a series of four or five open-ended questions, drawn from a pool of questions based on the material covered on the lab blueprint. No new topics are being added. The exams are not been increased in difficulty and the well-prepared candidate should have no trouble answering the questions. The length of the exam will remain eight hours. Candidates will need to achieve a passing score on both the open-ended questions and the lab portion in order to pass the lab and become certified. Other CCIE tracks will change over the next year, with exact dates announced in advance.


Effective February 17th, 2009, candidates will also see two other changes in CCIE written exams. First, candidates will now be required to answer each question before moving on to the next question; candidates will no longer be allowed to skip a question and come back to it at a later time. Second, there will be an update to the score report. The overall exam score and the exam passing score will now be reported as a scaled score, on a scale from 300-1000. This change will not affect the difficulty of the current set of exams and will assure CCIE written exams will be consistent with Cisco’s other career certification exams.


If you guys like more information, visit http://ciscocert.custhelp.com/rd?1=AvcG~wodDv8SHUDpGhse~yL~Jvkq~w3~&2=1837. This is currently for the Routing and Switching track but Cisco assured us that this will apply to other tracks as well. Now dumpsters, what is your next move? :-)

UPDATE : The open-ended questions are worth 21 points and the CCIE lab 79 points. However in order to pass the CCIE certification, you need to PASS BOTH the open-ended questions (scoring 4 out of 5 at least) and the lab. Also as some of you may already know, the open-ended questions are not interviews by humans but rather they are computerized questions like those in the CCIE written examination. An example which I think might appear on the open ended question will be something like "What is a OSPF type 3" ?

Friday, January 2, 2009

Happy New Year

Happy New Year all :-)

I have decided to postpone my written to the first half of 2009 as my confidence level is not really there yet. Hence I will need to read more beers ... er ... I mean materials for the time being to further boost my confidence level :-). Better to be well prepared than half prepared don't you think?

Traditionally I will come up with a list of TODOs or resolutions each year. This year is no different. I have added two significant entries which relates to me preparing for the CCIE. I am really hoping that I'll be able to hit the nail in the coffin this year for the CCIE ;-).

1. I plan to have the written cleared before March 2009 (supposed to be in December 2008 but oh well)

2. I plan to have a first attempt at the lab in June 2009 (supposed to be in August 2009 but the mobile lab in Singapore have been rescheduled earlier) but again it will most likely be deferred to a later date.

Ohter than that, I am also preparing to write a non-technical article on how VOIP has helped me in my communication with family and friends for the CCIE Flyer. I hope to have positive or negative feedback from you guys on this.

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Merry CCIE Christmas :-)

CCIE studies have taken a short break due to the coming holidays. I am unfortunately still not sure whether I will be sitting for the CCIE written which I scheduled end of this month. I am still feeling very nervous and not confident enough. I may defer to a later date should I feel that I am ill-prepared to perhaps end of January/February 2009? I believe that it's better to defer until I truly am confident and understand it in and out. I have cover most of the topics in the written save perhaps redistribution and multicasting which I am having trouble understanding it the way I wish I would. However, I believe I will hit the nail on the coffin sooner or later :-).

In case, some of you didn't know, the CCIE Flyer December edition is out at http://www.ccieflyer.com so download a copy and start reading the wonderful articles there. I have written an article on dumping so hopefully I meet the expectations of you readers. Please feel free to comment should you feel what I have written is wrong and misleading.

Until, happy holidays everyone and to those who celebrate like me, a very Merry and Happy Christmas and a Joyous New Year. Let's hope those are sitting for their CCIE lab exams will pass and for those who are re-attempting, pass this time. My best wishes to you all! (it seems that my target of #23456 is coming nearer ... looks like I have to aim for a new number #23999 or #24232? Any number will do in the end ;-))

Thursday, December 4, 2008

CCIE Flyer November Edition

I know it's December now but just in case some of you didn't know, CCIE Flyer November edition is out! Get it at http://www.ccieflyer.com :-).

Also probably an interesting read for some who has not seen this, some of the top 20 networking sites at http://www.networkworld.com/community/print/25115