Practice Tests
|
These tests belong to Networkdesigner.net and not sponsored by, endorsed by or affiliated with Cisco® Systems, Inc.
|
Exam Info
|
This exam info was writen by Networkdesigner.net and not sponsored by, endorsed by or affiliated with Cisco® Systems, Inc.
|
Forums
|
These Forums belong to Networkdesigner.net and not sponsored by, endorsed by or affiliated with Cisco® Systems, Inc.
|
Our Recomended Books
|
These Books are recomended by Networkdesigner.net and not recomended by, sponsored by, endorsed by or affiliated with Cisco® Systems, Inc.
|
|
|
|
Note: You must be registered in order to post a reply.
To register, click here. Registration is FREE!
T O P I C R E V I E W |
mehran |
I wanna take my CCNA exam in couple of days, so wondering if someone can share the exam questions/exam certs with me !!
Cheers :)
mehran
|
SleB |
quote:
I wanna take my CCNA exam in couple of days, so wondering if someone can share the exam questions/exam certs with me !!
Cheers :)
mehran
So did you pass your exam? I will try it myself in the first week of March. Give some news.
See ya!!
|
lpescato |
Good luck. The passing score is 849 now. You dont need to know subnetting, contrary to popular belief, as you will get as few as 1 questions. I have gotten a max of 6. You definitely need to know IOS commands, basic networking, access lists, and the OSI model. Let us know your results!
|
SleB |
Thanks for the input lpescato...by the way...what is your next step in certification?
|
lpescato |
I'm thinking about the CCNP next, although just getting this far has been rather taxing, thank God for expense accounts!
Actually, I may just go in and get the Net Plus cert, as alot of their questions are basic networking, much easier than Cisco. I figure the more certs the better...I am deathly afraid of Win2K though.
|
synfin |
really!? no subnetting? What about many IPX questions? or Novell?
|
synfin |
How many questions do you have?
Are they actual exam questions?
|
startec |
Subnetting is one of the easier topics in networking. I guess its not really practical since DCHP does the job and very few of us will ever be designing class B or A networks. I found it give wonderful insight into the inner workings of tcp/ip.
Startec
A+ Network+
|
synfin |
I think subnetting is practical. I work at an ISP, and DHCP is only applied with dial-up, and adsl circuits. Even then, why wouldnt the IPs that the DHCP server hands out be subnetted from other IPs in the block being used for other things. Most of those blocks are even classC.   
|
sherm74 |
Thanks all for the info this site is great I am learning more and more every day. Thanks a bunch.
|
GreatScot! |
Guys, there have been some questions on subnetting and that some feel that you don't need to know it well. Even though the likelihood is that not many folks will be designing class A or B networks, that is for public networks - which is true. However, there is a very real possiblity that many of you will have to design or work in and expand a private network (i.e., the 10.x.x.x or 172.168.x.x ranges) for some small and medium business (or as expansions within a large business branch office) and you will need to know subnetting well to do this intelligently. My advice is to know it cold, both straight-up as well as beyond the 8-bit boundary and VLSM. For what it is worth...
|
esQuire |
quote:
Hi, I am in the same boat! However, I have a couple of links to practice exam question on the net! If you want more information... email me!
|
esQuire |
quote:
Hi, I am in the same boat! However, I have a couple of links to practice exam question on the net! If you want more information... email me!
|
|
|
|