[j-nsp] JNCIE-ER

Joseph Soricelli joe at proteus.net
Tue Mar 30 19:54:29 EDT 2010


Stefan-

Thank you very much for the kind words. I'm sure you did well and  
passed your exam!

Regards,
Joe

Joseph Soricelli
CEO
Proteus Networks

703-980-3999
joe at proteus.net
www.proteus.net
Twitter - @proteusnetworks

On Mar 27, 2010, at 7:34 PM, Stefan Fouant wrote:

>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: juniper-nsp-bounces at puck.nether.net [mailto:juniper-nsp-
>> bounces at puck.nether.net] On Behalf Of Dilip Srivastava
>> Sent: Friday, March 26, 2010 9:26 AM
>> To: adnan
>> Cc: Richard A Steenbergen; juniper-nsp at puck.nether.net
>> Subject: Re: [j-nsp] JNCIE-ER
>>
>> I am also looking for JNCIE-ER please share the documents or study
>> material
>>
>> regards
>> dilip
>>
>> On Thu, Mar 25, 2010 at 10:25 PM, adnan <ahabib at asacogroup.com>  
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Dear All
>>>
>>> I am preparing my JNCIE-ER . if anyone is also preparing contact me
>> so we
>>> can share the material .
>
> Well I just took the exam yesterday and I don't want to count my  
> chickens
> before they hatch, but I feel that I did pretty good so here is a  
> quick
> synopsis of what I used for the exam:
>
> - 'JUNOS Enterprise Routing' by Harry Reynolds and Doug Marschke.   
> Read it
> twice if you can :)
> - 'Advanced Juniper Networks Routing in the Enterprise' courseware  
> and labs
> which can be found on the Juniper FastTrack site.  I definitely  
> recommend
> going through the labs because they are extremely representative of  
> the
> types of things that you are likely to see on the exam.
> - 'Adaptive Services' chapter in the JUNOS 'Services Interfaces
> Configuration Guide' - its 500 pages but will definitely school you  
> on all
> the variants of JUNOS Services
> - The 'JNCIP-M Study Guide' by Harry Reynolds is another really useful
> addition if you can go through that book and do the labs this will  
> really
> help with routing policy and configuration of OSPF, RIP, and BGP.
> - In addition to reading the above and getting a good strong  
> foundational
> level of understanding, I would say the *single* most useful  
> preparation tip
> I can give to anyone is to take the JNCIE-ER Bootcamp and/or the  
> Remote
> Proctored lab exams offered by Proteus Networks.  I haven't  
> personally taken
> the bootcamp, but I did see the materials from a colleague who sat  
> through
> it and after sitting the exam I can tell you that Bootcamp is spot  
> on.  I
> did however take their Remote Proctored exams and once again I am not
> disappointed with my experience with them.  Rick Schenderlein was my  
> proctor
> with Proteus and he really took the time to help me understand the  
> areas
> that I could use improvement on.  Their products are truly a notch  
> above and
> will more than prepare you to sit the exam.  These are the guys who  
> "wrote
> the book" in more ways than one with the JNCIE-ER... their offerings  
> should
> be considered insurance... you're already shelling out some pretty  
> big bucks
> to sit the exam, why not do yourself the favor and take a look at  
> what they
> have to offer - http://www.proteus.net
>
> All in all, I didn't think the exam was that tough, but I also have  
> 12+
> years of experience working with JUNOS and I also have a JNCIE-M.  I
> actually finished the exam in a little over 5 hours and spent  
> another 1-2
> hours going over everything just to make sure I had it right.  I've  
> heard
> that most people going in are pretty much down to the wire with time  
> so I'm
> not sure what happened in my case but I hope I can attribute it to  
> just
> being over-prepared.
>
> Oh one other tip, thanks Addy for passing this on to me - make sure  
> you read
> the full exam in its entirety before starting a single configuration
> element.  This is truly an expert level exam, one which requires you  
> to
> think through your design decisions.  There are often things later  
> on in the
> exam that might require you to go back and reconfigure something  
> you've set
> up in an earlier section.  Reading ahead will allow you to save  
> yourself
> some time when you've thought your design through fully in advance.
>
> I'll let you know in a few days when I receive my pass/fail status...
>
> Stefan Fouant, CISSP, JNCIE-M/T
> www.shortestpathfirst.net
> GPG Key ID: 0xB5E3803D
>
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