Hi.morning guys and girls
Of you I.T people how many of you have done any of the CCNA stuff ?
I’m looking to move in to the network architect area and was wondering if anyone has any advice or pointers ?
Cheers
Is CCNA really cisco specific or is it fairly applicable to network architecture in general?
The most important thing you said there was in the last section. When I started doing my CCNA, I did it to complement my role at the time. Did I like it? Not particularly - and as such I found it to be a bit of a chore. When you love the task at hand, you absorb the information so much more easily.In general and covers a lot of best practise stuff. If you can drive Cisco gear you can use HP/Aruba, Brocade fabric switches as the CLI is basically the same and wing everything else.
The CCNA has gotten much harder since I last did it and now even touches on things such as BGP so it's a pretty good cert to have.
If you're motivated you can buy a book, get the CBT Nuggets videos and GNS3 and do it in your own time for very little cash.
Smart money is on getting the CCNA and then cracking on with the security certs and learning how to use Cisco's ASA lineup. You can then use the knowledge to configure most other things and harden other network gear.
If you've got a bit of server and virtualisation knowledge or have the means to build a lab at home, there's a lot of crossover knowledge.
After that you're into ISP tech and fun things like MPLS.
Source: I've got a CCNP R+S and I'm the network engineer for a company with 2500+ people and 120+ sites. I love my job. Every day is different and I work with some truly brilliant people.
Can't imagine doing anything else.
Really should pay more attention to this site. I'm so crap at forums these days.Worse, was Cisco’s approach to documentation. They would go on and on about seemingly irrelevant sections and simply skip over knowledge points that you were trying to get your head around. I was advised before I even started by three different people - to entirely skip Cisco’s writing on subnets. How right they were!
I definitely see your point there. I learned very quickly to slow down and examine my work.I do see the appeal to networking - it’s literally like a grand puzzle with hard and fast rules that can provide massive gains or create huge headaches. It’s not really for me unfortunately.