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  ICND2 Exam ----Feedback
Posted by: coolblullc - 03-03-2013, 07:03 PM - Forum: Exam Experience - No Replies

Recently lot of my students have complained that they only got 4 questions out of ICND2 exam material available on this site , the labs are fine (VTP and Frame Relay Sim popular). ICND1 exam did have good feedback . Any Idea if Cisco has changed the exam or this site is not updated .

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  PASSED ICND PART 2!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Posted by: qfmoney - 02-28-2013, 06:44 PM - Forum: Exam Experience - No Replies

Just passed icnd 2 this morning. Originally i failed icnd 2 by 5 points and my teacher showed me how2pass and the rest is history. After i had failed i waited the 1 week before taking it again and passed thanks to how2pass. My sources are packet tracer;todd ccna book and how2pass.

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  QID:NA29
Posted by: havenlad - 02-28-2013, 12:22 AM - Forum: Answer this question - Replies (2)

With this question, about CDP, the exhibit gives us the Bravo router IP is 10.1.1.2

The answer says we can tell from the output the Alpha router IP is 10.1.1.1.  How? It could be a few different ones depending how it is subnetted

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  Passed today
Posted by: e24com - 02-25-2013, 08:35 PM - Forum: CCNP ENARSI 300-410 Forum - No Replies

Hello everyone,

I just passed today 642-902 with score 930.
Again, I recommend Cisco Press and CBT nuggets to understand the concepts and foundations, and afterwards H2P.

I had 4 simulations, 53 questions in total. In my case 3 minutes left, so time is running fast.
If you not understand Hands-on labs and you are not able to solve those in less than 10 minutes, simply you are not ready for the exam.

Good luck...



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  NA486
Posted by: havenlad - 02-23-2013, 04:18 PM - Forum: Answer this question - Replies (2)

This answer seems to me to be wrong.  What do others think?

There are 3 routers connected via serial links. The routers have 27 hosts, 17 hosts and the one we are looking at has 13 hosts.  The question is which address should the fast ethernet address have.

We are subnetting on 192.168.1.0 with a mask of 255.255.255.224

That's ok so far, but is says we are using RIP1.  How would that work with a subnet of 224.  Surely it would not see the subnetted bits if using RIP1?

The answer I find even more strange.  Options are:

xx.xx.xx.64
xx.xx.xx.192
xx.xx.xx.190
xx.xx.xx.31
xx.xx.xx.127

I went for 64 as 192 seemed less correct.

The answer was 190, because all the others are either broadcasts or subnets.  But if we are looking for a fast ethernet port from a router with a number of hosts, it would be subnet address surely no?

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  QID:NA449 Troubleshooting LAN interface in full duplex
Posted by: dandenoth - 02-18-2013, 06:02 PM - Forum: Answer this question - Replies (1)

So on this question, it asks what error condition can be immediately ruled out, when troubleshooting a LAN interface operation in full duplex mode. The answer it gives, collisions, is the best answer of those given, however, wouldn't collisions still be a possibility if the LAN segment exceeds the max cable length? Just a couple weeks ago at work, in fact, we had this issue where an end user was connected to their access switch using an Cat5 cable that was probably about 20 - 30 feet over the max length, and they had collision issues.

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  QID: NA648 Answer Query
Posted by: quailer - 01-25-2013, 03:30 PM - Forum: Answer this question - Replies (1)

Hi, just have query regarding answer provided for this question.

Q. What happens when computers on a private network attempt to connect to the internet through a Cisco router running PAT?

Correct answer: The router uses the same IP address but a different TCP source port number for each connection.

I understand PAT is about port translation & assigning different port numbers to connections. But PAT is also another name for NAT which is about translating private addresses to public. Here we have a private network going through a PAT router so I assume it is using private addresses - these private addresses need to be translated to public so should the answer not be the option below:

The router assigns a unique IP address from a pool of legally registered addresses for the duration of the connection.

Thanks

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  CCNA / CCNP Home Lab
Posted by: sumncguy - 01-25-2013, 02:42 PM - Forum: General Discussion - Replies (2)

I am trying to setup my home lab.

Its consists of 3 2610s, 2 2950s and 1 3550.

I want to use the 3550 as a layer 2 switch only (at this point).

Im having problems getting it to connect to the 2610.

I see the vlan 1 and fa0/1 (in switchport mode) up. But CDP isnt working.

Can someone point me in the right direction ? Output is given below ...

3550_1#show ip int br
Interface                  IP-Address      OK? Method Status                Protocol
Vlan1                      192.168.10.3    YES manual up                    up
FastEthernet0/1            unassigned      YES unset  up                    up
FastEthernet0/2            unassigned      YES unset  down                  down
FastEthernet0/3            unassigned      YES unset  down                  down
FastEthernet0/4            unassigned      YES unset  down                  down

3550_1#show cdp nei det
3550_1#

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  CCNA 802-640 --> It's over 9000! [not really, just over 930]
Posted by: BioBennie - 01-18-2013, 01:30 PM - Forum: Exam Experience - No Replies

I just took my CCNA recently after using this site and passed with a score over 930. I don't want to be specific because I'm paranoid.

Questions: It's hard to gauge how many related directly to the exam here, but I'd say maybe 50% to 75%, or possibly more if I just forgot & didn't recognize. There are >900 test questions to review and it takes a long time to review them all. I'm pretty sure there were new ones. I know they changed the ACL SIM (question QID:S17). Essentially they wanted me to allow x.x.x.2 instead of x.x.x.3. The name of the server they wanted to restrict was named Financial Accounting or something like that. Also, they wanted only this 1 host access via web browser, but wanted to block all other types of access from that computer & all other host computers + core. I wrote my access list like:

  • access-list 100 permit tcp host [x.x.x.3 PC] host [x.x.x.17 server] eq 80
  • access-list 100 deny ip any host [x.x.x.17 server]
  • access-list 100 permit ip any any
Afterwards, I applied the list inbound on the routers Fa 0/x interface that connected to the server switch.

I also had QID:S14, the SIM with the bunch of switches. I actually had one of the optional questions you have listed in the answer key for this one, specifically the "SwX was taken out of ...". I also had the one asking which ones were operating as trunks & which port would a frame be forwarded with X source MAC & Y destination MAC. Basically I had all 3 additional questions that weren't on the official How2Pass SIM, but were thankfully included in the "Additional Questions" section. My other two questions were 'which port would a frame destined for out of the network be forwarded' & 'What addy should be configured as default-gateway for host blah blah'.

My 3rd SIM was one of the retardedly easy ones, so not worth mentioning. Pretty sure it was spot on to the SIM's on this site too.

------------------------

[Give me a sec while I get up on my high & mighty pedestal] Here are my tips on getting a good score. I finished the CCNA with a good score & around 60 seconds left.

You need exposure to all the questions. There are a fuckton of questions. DO NOT MEMORIZE THE ANSWERS. That is idiotic & there are too many besides (I have a friend trying to do this). Just go through them answering them honestly, then once you've picked your choice, click on "Answer" and see if you were wrong. Do not guess. If you don't know it, just click answer, read which one is correct, write notes if you have to, and choose a WRONG answer, then move on. HERE'S WHY: the site keeps track of which ones you've gotten wrong & right. Obviously you don't need to review the ones you've nailed & got right. You can choose a 'filter' to only answer the ones you've gotten incorrect. You need exposure.

Get a spiral bound pad for notes. Start with an initial page of subjects you need to brush up on. Mine had items like "IPv6, port-sercurity options, access-lists, etc". The 2nd & beyond page just contained notes. I also noticed that my initial note taking sucked balls, but got much better later on. If time is on your side, I highly recommend rewriting your notes once you've gone through all >900 questions. I know I had duplicate & triplicate notes on the same subject material spanning almost 40 pages worth. I could've condensed it to 15-20 easily.

While writing notes, use a black pen, red (or other colored) pen, and a highlighter. The more active you are in your note taking, the more you remember. Also, it helps when reviewing because you're not just reading a boring fucking wall of black ink. I highlighted the things that I really needed to know, like IPv6 router protocol broadcast addresses.

Oh, here are a couple of videos that really nailed it for me regarding IPv6. I never actually watched the CBT Nugget videos, but I hear they are very helpful.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mWB3IJkySto
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bpnR7pGc7SE

The key here is that memorizing will help you get maybe a score of 600 or 700. You need to learn & understand wtf is going on, not just memorize. This site helps with getting exposure, and the "answer" section helps with understanding. This will assist massively when you DO encounter the same questions on the test and burn through it in 5-10 seconds, giving you time to think about the "HOLY SHIT, WTF ARE THEY TALKING ABOUT" questions that you sit on for a couple of minutes. I finished with less than a minute left, so any time saved was extremely helpful.

Well, I hope that helps people. I'm pretty stoked now that I have my CCNA. I'll be working on my CCNP once I've caught up with my college classes (I'm behind now that I spent so much time on this damn Cisco shit).

Later

PS: Don't wear long sleeve shirts. They give you a dry erase legal size plastic thing & ball point dry erase marker to write crap on. While writing, you'll probably get crap on your sleeves like I did.

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  QID:NA733 (show running-config)
Posted by: Mayor - 01-08-2013, 09:18 AM - Forum: Answer this question - Replies (2)

I'm a little confused by the question:
An administrator is in the process of changing the configuration of a router.  What command will allow the administrator to check the changes that have been made prior to saving the new configuration?

Correct Answer: Router#show running-config


There's a very good chance that I'm misinterpreting this question, but shouldn't the admin be checking the startup-configuration if they want to compare before saving?  Unless the running-config hasn't been altered, wouldn't a sh run show their current configuration rather than prior?

I think I may need to lay down.

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