The last thing to talk about is the pricing.
I wish that this had been available for me back when I was doing my Cisco qualifications. So if you do have any queries, you can ask Rene in here and he will get back to you. You’ll also notice it’s very often Rene who was the last person to post because he is responsive to questions. A lot of sites have forums where all you’ll find is tumbleweed, but the forums on are very active. The other thing that you get is the forum. You don’t just get one post covering BGP fundamentals, you’ll find 123(!) articles covering pretty much all the sub-topics inside BGP. Each article has an easy to understand breakdown of the technology with an example you can run in the lab. If you search for BGP for example, you’ll see the depth of material included. Another useful feature is the Search box.
So, the first thing you get is the courses. Pasting the example configs from Network Lessons into your lab configurations saves you time. It is possible to get other excellent text resources ( I always recommend Todd Lammle’s books – they’re what I used to learn networking way back in the day), but the thing with a book is you can’t copy and paste from it. This is perfect as an on-the-job reference as well as for study. It’s much easier to understand that way, and when I’m working in the real world it shows me the configuration I should actually be using. I don’t want all of the other possible options that are hardly ever used bundled in the same place in the same article.Ī great thing about is it gives the normal best practice configuration that you should use.
When I look for a configuration example, I want to know how this feature is actually configured in the real world following best practice. If you Google for pretty much any Cisco networking topic you’ll find that is also in the first page of results. The configuration examples will typically show all of the different possible options which can make things really confusing. The Cisco documentation is always very detailed but sometimes it can be toodetailed. If you Google for a networking technology it will typically be which comes up first.