|
skooma512 posted:Any more tips? I fixed up a Dell Precision from work and have server 2012 on it. I have Mastering Server 2012 by Minasi and the MS Press books for 70-410. It's not an easy exam, especially if you aren't already getting exposure in your day job, but if you're really busting your rear end with studying try to get an exam in while Microsoft is doing the second shot promotion. Taking the test and seeing the actual questions helped me a lot as far as informing what and how I was studying. I never found any online practice tests to be a good representation of the difficulty or the way the questions are presented, and hell, it's multiple choice, so you may end up surprising yourself.
|
![]() |
|
![]()
|
# ? Jun 14, 2024 06:23 |
That ends on May 31st. I guess I have my work cut out for me. It's fine though, I've taken entire college courses that happen in about the same amount of time, usually 4 deep. MS tests are legendary for how obtuse the questions are, even the Security+ book referenced their style.
|
|
![]() |
|
How much have Microsoft exams changed over the last 10 years or so? I passed my MCSA 2003 when I was 17 and didn't find it that bad, but I haven't sat a single microsoft exam since, and my work has just asked me to do the MCSA then MCSE 2012 I remember a couple of lovely questions like "You need to choose option xyz, is it in control panel, system, advanced, or control panel, system, more, or control panel, power, advanced?" but otherwise nothing too bad
|
![]() |
|
Voice & Video certs are getting retired/combined under Collaboration. https://learningnetwork.cisco.com/community/ccna-ccnp-collaboration gently caress. I'm about halfway through my CCNA Voice studying...guess I should pick up the pace a bit.
|
![]() |
|
Ahdinko posted:How much have Microsoft exams changed over the last 10 years or so? I passed my MCSA 2003 when I was 17 and didn't find it that bad, but I haven't sat a single microsoft exam since, and my work has just asked me to do the MCSA then MCSE 2012 The format has changed a bit and I consider the exams to be harder then they were. Getting the MCITP:EA was much more difficult than the 2003 MCSE. The exams have testlets in them now, where they give you a scenario and then you answer 5 or so questions about it. There are multiple choice/multiple answer questions, drag and drop questions, and the content can be more dynamic than the old tests. Many of them have moved to an adaptive format. Say you answer 3 AD specific questions of increasing difficulty, the test will stop asking your AD questions figuring you know it, and move on to some other crap you may not know as well. The last exam I took was the 70-647, and it took me 3 tries to get past it.
|
![]() |
I went through the Xendesktop 1Y0-200 requirements and what's covered in the Xendesktop 7 Cookbook. I'm still trying to track down legit free non-dump practice exams with very little luck to figure out how much of the Cookbook studying is relevant to the exam. Stupid lack of prep books :-(
|
|
![]() |
|
I'm finishing up the Stanly VCP5 course and I'm getting railed by the free VMware practice tests, which I guess is to be expected because the course feels more like an overview than a deep dive. I'm going to pick up some books to fill in the gaps. I'm torn between the VMware Official Certification Guide and the Sybex VCP-550 Study Guide by Brian Atkinson. I already have Scott Lowe's Mastering vSphere 5.5 book, but I'm looking for something extra that's tailored toward exam studies with practice tests and whatnot. If you had to choose between the official VMware guide and the Sybex guide, which would you choose? Tangentially, how does VMware's publication quality compare to Cisco Press?
|
![]() |
|
skipdogg posted:The format has changed a bit and I consider the exams to be harder then they were. Getting the MCITP:EA was much more difficult than the 2003 MCSE. It's still mostly multiple choice without any simulations, correct?
|
![]() |
|
Cenodoxus posted:I'm finishing up the Stanly VCP5 course and I'm getting railed by the free VMware practice tests, which I guess is to be expected because the course feels more like an overview than a deep dive. I used the Sybex guide exclusively and passed, though I'd have access to a home lab.
|
![]() |
|
Tab8715 posted:It's still mostly multiple choice without any simulations, correct? It depends on the exam. When I was taking the first portion of A+, it was roughly 70% percent multiple choice. Second portion was 50/50.
|
![]() |
|
Finally scheduled and passed the OSCP exam after managing to put it off for ~1 year. Next up is probably CISSP, but I can't take it before April. Should I buy materials now or wait for the new ones to come out?
|
![]() |
|
Gooble Gobble posted:Finally scheduled and passed the OSCP exam after managing to put it off for ~1 year. Next up is probably CISSP, but I can't take it before April. Should I buy materials now or wait for the new ones to come out? New exam on April 15th. I'd probably wait.
|
![]() |
|
Gooble Gobble posted:Finally scheduled and passed the OSCP exam after managing to put it off for ~1 year. Next up is probably CISSP, but I can't take it before April. Should I buy materials now or wait for the new ones to come out? ISC2 is saying to wait, but I'd strongly recommend the study material that DirtyFalcon suggested when I asked last week. Those recs turned a pointless slog through Shon Harris' word soup into something I could compartmentalize and understand much more effectively. Get the Conrad book (highly recommend the Kindle edition) and take quizzes through CCCure (I paid like 40 bucks for 6 months access and they have a TON of other tests up. The Harris practice exam book is good as well but costlier. All of these things are going to have new editions for the new quiz. If you have the $$ buy Harris but keep it in your professional bookshelf and use it as a reference instead of a full blown study guide. Immanentized fucked around with this message at 22:23 on Feb 18, 2015 |
![]() |
|
Any recommended resource for free ICND-1 practice tests? I'll even buy a book o'tests from Amazon if it's not too pricey.
|
![]() |
|
Cenodoxus posted:I'm finishing up the Stanly VCP5 course and I'm getting railed by the free VMware practice tests, which I guess is to be expected because the course feels more like an overview than a deep dive. I used the Sybex study guide and the whitepapers listed in the blueprint. The study guide was great to use as a lab guide along with the practice tests/flashcards. The whitepapers helped a lot too. The language on the tests seems to be pulled directly from the whitepapers so it really helped me to read through that and my practice test scores went up considerably after reading through them.
|
![]() |
|
Gooble Gobble posted:Finally scheduled and passed the OSCP exam after managing to put it off for ~1 year. Next up is probably CISSP, but I can't take it before April. Should I buy materials now or wait for the new ones to come out? How familiar were you with the material before you took the OSCP class? I have been studying for the CEH because it was something work asked me to get but I hear the OSCP is more respected so I have been looking into it a bit as well.
|
![]() |
|
If you can do the OSCP you should be able to sleep through the CISSP.
|
![]() |
Cenodoxus posted:I'm finishing up the Stanly VCP5 course and I'm getting railed by the free VMware practice tests, which I guess is to be expected because the course feels more like an overview than a deep dive. Sybex + home labbing extensively did it for me.
|
|
![]() |
|
hitachi posted:How familiar were you with the material before you took the OSCP class? I have been studying for the CEH because it was something work asked me to get but I hear the OSCP is more respected so I have been looking into it a bit as well. I don't have any formal security education or job experience, but I've been around the security scene for a couple of years and have taught myself a lot. I'd say I knew or was familiar with around 90% of the material before I even started the class. That doesn't mean it's going to be significantly harder for someone who has less experience. All you really need to have going into it is basic security and scripting knowledge and you should be fine. Between the videos, 365 pages of course material, and the labs you will have everything you need to succeed. If you do end up taking it just be honest with yourself regarding how much time you can set aside for labs. Try and get through as many of the machines as possible because you will see similar situations in the exam. Think about starting off with the 30 day lab pack since you can always get an extension. Also, be careful when choosing a time to do the exam. I believe you can reschedule up to 3 times for free with your initial Course+Lab+Exam pack, so make sure you have enough time for the 24 hour exam and reschedule if you foresee anything coming up that will take time away from it. I set mine up for noon on a Saturday, had enough points to pass at around midnight, got some sleep, made sure I had all the screenshots and proof I needed before the VPN time expired, then took a couple of hours to write my report. Once you send the report off you'll get a confirmation they received it and an email with results a day or two after that.
|
![]() |
|
Passed icnd2! 841 needed 825. Way harder than the first test, felt like I was failing the whole time.
|
![]() |
Bigass Moth posted:Passed icnd2! 841 needed 825. Way harder than the first test, felt like I was failing the whole time. ![]() I felt the exact same way when I passed icnd2. Was definitely a lot different than Icnd1 was and more difficult
|
|
![]() |
|
I know this is a weird question, but how long does it take on average to study for a CCENT? My experience so far is the A+ and what little I've picked up from being a field tech. I know what DNS is, I know what DHCP is, I know MACs, FQDNs, and Hostnames. I really need to find a job where I get days off every week, and with how scarce junior level jobs are here, I feel like a cert might help me stand out. I just want to know how long it will take when, on average, I have less than 10 hours a week to study.
|
![]() |
|
Does anyone have any experience with any of the securitytube.net courses? Specifically interested in the python course http://www.securitytube-training.com/online-courses/securitytube-python-scripting-expert/index.html
|
![]() |
|
22 Eargesplitten posted:I know this is a weird question, but how long does it take on average to study for a CCENT? My experience so far is the A+ and what little I've picked up from being a field tech. I know what DNS is, I know what DHCP is, I know MACs, FQDNs, and Hostnames. I really need to find a job where I get days off every week, and with how scarce junior level jobs are here, I feel like a cert might help me stand out. I just want to know how long it will take when, on average, I have less than 10 hours a week to study. It might be worth sitting the N+ before the CCENT as I don't know if the CCENT will drop you too far in the deep end. I did N+ followed by CCENT, and used the CBT Nuggets videos for the ICND1 which I thought were excellent. If you can put aside £200 or equivalent for some cheap lab kit you will be able to do your labs. You can do it virtually for free but I found when I was inexperienced it was nice to have the kit infront of me and actually see the lights and the cables and stuff. I'd guess by the time I watched the videos, did my labs and practice tests and then brushed up on the areas where I felt weak after the labs, it was probably around 50 hours?
|
![]() |
|
22 Eargesplitten posted:I know this is a weird question, but how long does it take on average to study for a CCENT? My experience so far is the A+ and what little I've picked up from being a field tech. I know what DNS is, I know what DHCP is, I know MACs, FQDNs, and Hostnames. I really need to find a job where I get days off every week, and with how scarce junior level jobs are here, I feel like a cert might help me stand out. I just want to know how long it will take when, on average, I have less than 10 hours a week to study. I would estimate I studied 100-150 hours for the ccna and still felt overwhelmed at the massive amount of info I had to memorize.
|
![]() |
|
So I'm doing pretty good on the CCCure quizzes for my CISSP but I'm getting kind of worried that the material is out of date in the question bank- this stuff hasn't really changed since the early 90s so I'm guessing physical and networks comms questions from 2001 and 2004 are still valid, right? That said, I'm hitting 90% so I think I'm good to go for next Thursday- any last minute tips?
|
![]() |
|
Immanentized posted:So I'm doing pretty good on the CCCure quizzes for my CISSP but I'm getting kind of worried that the material is out of date in the question bank- this stuff hasn't really changed since the early 90s so I'm guessing physical and networks comms questions from 2001 and 2004 are still valid, right? https://cccure.training/m/articles/view/Cram-Study-Guide-for-the-CISSP-Exam Check out the "sunflower" guide and the Michael Overly guide. The last and first respective download links at the bottom... Good last minute study notes. Otherwise I wouldn't bother doing anything the day before. If you don't know it by then you aren't gonna learn it.
|
![]() |
|
Anyone try out the new ROUTE/SWITCH guides yet?
|
![]() |
|
Alain Post posted:Anyone try out the new ROUTE/SWITCH guides yet? Currently using the 300-101 guide by Kevin Wallace to study for ROUTE - taking the exam Saturday.
|
![]() |
|
To the Goons that got certified in Network+ and used the sybex book to study: did you find the test any harder than the practice questions?
|
![]() |
Failed the 1Y0-200. 66% required, got a 63%. gently caress. I wish I knew if it was one thing I thought I did right in a simulation that was the issue, because I could have sworn I configured it correctly. Gonna have to go back and see. Don't use the Xendestop Cookbook as exam prep. Which sucks because now I'm basically gonna have to compile Citrix eDocs pages into a usable written prep guide.
|
|
![]() |
|
Zhiwau posted:To the Goons that got certified in Network+ and used the sybex book to study: did you find the test any harder than the practice questions? From what I remember I thought the book questions were a bit harder. Once I sat down for the actual test I thought it was a breeze. Just remember all of the vocab they throw at you and how to subnet quickly.
|
![]() |
|
Man oh man is Comptia "Project+" material is so dull. ![]() (Necessary for WGU class.) ZergFluid fucked around with this message at 15:48 on Mar 1, 2015 |
![]() |
|
ZergFluid posted:Man oh man is Comptia "Project+" material is so dull. Hey I'm starting there myself soon. ![]() Though hearing Project+ being dull is troubling...
|
![]() |
|
Zeratanis posted:Hey I'm starting there myself soon. ![]() Don't get me wrong the material seems very doable but yea everyone complains about it being dry. It's also worth half of the minimum full-time credits load. I started in October and my term ends in April. (I came in with an Associate's degree, the A+, Network+ and the CCNA) and completed two business classes and two certs for the term so far. If I were more diligent I could have completed twice that credit load. Good luck!
|
![]() |
|
Just watched the first CBT nugget video for CCNA and this guy is coked out of his mind or something
|
![]() |
|
Final question before I go in on Thursday- in your personal experiences, did you folks find the actual CISSP exam to be pretty similar to the prep or will this be like the CISA/CRMA where the prep stuff is ratched up a difficulty layer?
|
![]() |
|
Drunk Orc posted:Just watched the first CBT nugget video for CCNA and this guy is coked out of his mind or something It's loving amazing. Sooooo much better than the labsim guys.
|
![]() |
|
PneumonicBook posted:It's loving amazing. Sooooo much better than the labsim guys. I watched a 30 minute video and it wasn't god awful! At the end I thought this exact same thing ![]()
|
![]() |
|
![]()
|
# ? Jun 14, 2024 06:23 |
|
Drunk Orc posted:I watched a 30 minute video and it wasn't god awful! At the end I thought this exact same thing If you plan on making a lab I'd watch the 'Making a Lab' video sooner than later. You can probably get by with the Sims wgu has though.
|
![]() |