Funny... I support a large mortgage company who uses VoIP which would work out well except there are constant issues with voice quality, call drops, and seemingly impossible issues. And all of our equipment is Cisco (phones, routers w/ prioritization). I think my issue and probably others as well that would lead to a hestitancy to adopt is the support! What happens when all your phones go down? Unless you manage all of it yourself (and believe me - you won't in a large company), you better hope your Service contract is very nice.
Not that I'm aware of; when I took the MSCA test (271, 274 something like that) it was mostly long questions with multiple 'right' answers. The problem was that within the case study it gave you information which made some answers impossible. For instance: setting up authentication using CHAP, CHAPv2, EAP w/ TLS, etc etc. But the question stated there would be Windows 98 clients, therby eliminating everything but CHAP. I wish I had a better example, but the questions required you to not only know the available options but also the detailed mechanisms behind them.
Funny... I support a large mortgage company who uses VoIP which would work out well except there are constant issues with voice quality, call drops, and seemingly impossible issues. And all of our equipment is Cisco (phones, routers w/ prioritization). I think my issue and probably others as well that would lead to a hestitancy to adopt is the support! What happens when all your phones go down? Unless you manage all of it yourself (and believe me - you won't in a large company), you better hope your Service contract is very nice.
Not that I'm aware of; when I took the MSCA test (271, 274 something like that) it was mostly long questions with multiple 'right' answers. The problem was that within the case study it gave you information which made some answers impossible. For instance: setting up authentication using CHAP, CHAPv2, EAP w/ TLS, etc etc. But the question stated there would be Windows 98 clients, therby eliminating everything but CHAP. I wish I had a better example, but the questions required you to not only know the available options but also the detailed mechanisms behind them.
I assume your talking about MCSE on 2000. Because that is simply not the case for MCSE on 2003. I don't know anybody who could cram and pass that.
A+, Net+, CNA, CCNA, MCP (one away from MCSA 2003)
Interesting test... especially considering the Xeon system was using DDR2 whilst the AMD system had only DDR. Am I missing something?
Actually, I thought it was Multiple Errors... silly me