I got a question on groupstudy about my background, and why I chose Storage as my first CCIE. It seems like a good idea to post it here also.
My background is all over the place. It goes from running a small ISP when I was 18 to managing international CallManager clusters, to enterprise data center design and migrations. I swear that I have tech ADD. I see something new and I am like.. oooooh shiny, lets do a sniff and see how it works.
I actually attempted the Route Switch lab twice in 2002 (still had token ring and dlsw still) but got activated for the war before I could get my number. I can tell you.. that sucked horribly.
So, why did I choose to get my Storage CCIE first instead of finishing up my Route Switch first? Well, over the past couple years I have done a significant amount of IP storage (NFS, ISCSI, ATA over Ethernet, etc) including building my own IP storage heads based on linux. I had also done a little bit of fiber channel work. I felt that I had a significant advantage compared to most network engineers in the storage networking space. And, I think more importantly, the topics that I had to study were new and fresh. Whereas when I cracked open my Route Switch books.. I honestly wasn’t too excited about it at the time (I think I was holding a grudge from my first attempts in 2002).
The partner e-learning central portion of Cisco has an Excellent lab access to labgear.net. It gives you 2 hour segments of time with 2 MDS’s (both with IPS blades), 1 2 port jbod, and 2 2 port servers. They also have introductory tutorials for most major technology segments.
I did all of those, along with every E-learning class that was on PEC. I think the major ones were the Design, Support, and CASSI classes. I took that, sat for the design and support specialist exams, and took my written last December.
After doing all that work, I was honestly 70% there. I took a little break for January and February (There was no open lab dates) and then started hitting the labs I think at the end of February.
For the majority of my practice I used the labs available through PEC. I also was able to weasel my way into 8 hour sessions every Sunday from our channel SE. (I owe him plenty of drinks at networkers this year) For those 8 hour sessions I had labs created to summarize the major technology areas and to be as evil as possible to myself.
I had one attempt which didn’t work out as well as I would have liked. In RTP the lab starts at 7:15. This means if you are from the west coast like I am you will be getting up at 3:00 am in the morning for your lab. That royally kicked my butt. I diverted from my attack plan and ended up running out of time. It was a classic example of letting the lab run you, instead of you running the lab.
Luckily a date opened up just over a month later. I spent that time just working on my speed (speed is the secret sauce). I migrated to using Fabric Manager (gui interface) instead of command line. After 2 practice runs my time had dropped 25%. I also flew out to RTP 3 days before, and made sure to relax and get on east coast time.
For my final prep I got access to iementor’s lab. Their lab is excellent. I cannot reinforce enough how much it contributed to my confidence in that final week. Roman was really cool about working with an existing candidate to get me squeezed in. They are really cool guys, and they have the only workbook on the market right now.
So, I used their lab 2 days before mine, and then just chilled the day before. The day of the lab I had 70 points by lunch, and had completed configuration of the lab by 12:30. I spent the rest of the day reviewing my configurations (found 2 errors), fixing one bug, and generally harassing the proctor to make sure I didn’t misinterpret anything.
So.. if I had it all to do over again what would I do? I would still do the PEC stuff, and continue to primarily live in the Doc CD. Though I would probably pony up the cash and buy the iementor book and more lab time with them.
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