trunks
And we sat… eyeball to eyeball… not heeding this wise advice…(perversely amusing if you think about it).
Yep… about 2 minutes with a proctor would have saved me about 90 minutes and allowed me the time I might have spent doing more important things…
Like getting my digits and signing the Wall of Fame.
— “Clay K Auch (clauch)” wrote:
> > Use the proctors … Clarification is one main > reason they are there. Just remember … You need to > ask questions in a way that demonstrates you know > what you are talking about. Fishing for answers will > simply get you a, “Go back and read the question > again”. Tuning your methods to include the proctors > as part of your problem solving process will also > save you time. You would be surprise how much time > goes by as you sit there pondering the different > options related to any one task. Don’t troubleshoot > anything for more than 10 minutes and really try not > to spend more than 5 minutes on any one task at any > one point in time … Come back to it (I am > instructing myself as I say this as well)
> > Clay > > —–Original Message—– > From: nobody@groupstudy.com > [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of Darby > Weaver > Sent: Thursday, December 13, 2007 11:37 PM > To: devecchio; Ismail Masood > Cc: ccielab@groupstudy.com > Subject: Re: trunks > > If the trunks don’t say specifically, you might look > at the etherchannel configuration and it might help > you make a better choice, but then again, maybe not. > > You could always ask for clarification. > > > — devecchio wrote: > > > Just make sure to read the question carefully, > they will usualy say > > use an industry standard protocol or something > similar. If they just > > dont specify then u r free to choose ur poision, > just make sure u dont > > trap urself later.. > > > > On Dec 13, 2007 8:54 PM, Ismail Masood > wrote: > > > > > Hi All, > > > > > > > > > I am bit confused, if we asked to make trunks > > between the switches and no > > > details are provided then what should be the > > protocols and method used in > > > the cisco point of view. > > > > > > > > > Ishaq > > > > > > > > >
























