CCNA Cisco Certified Network Associate : Study Guide (with CD-ROM)
CCNA Cisco Certified Network Associate : Study Guide (with CD-ROM) book cover

CCNA Cisco Certified Network Associate : Study Guide (with CD-ROM)

2nd Edition

Price
$6.89
Format
Hardcover
Pages
832
Publisher
Sybex Inc
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0782126471
Dimensions
7.5 x 2.25 x 9 inches
Weight
4.08 pounds

Description

Some child psychologists will tell you that you should never talk down to your children. Rather than spoonfeeding 'em baby talk, you should speak to your kids using big words and long complex sentences--which is tougher on the kid at first, but ultimately makes them a lot smarter than they'd ever be from just hearing "goo goo ga ga". In much the same way, Sybex's CCNA Study Guide is a book that uncompromisingly presents complex material and expects you to live up to it. While the explanations are dense and often intimidating, once you get through this book, you'll be ready to face--and pass!--the treacherous CCNA exam. Todd Lammle assumes that the reader has a passing familiarity with basic networking concepts, and he launches straight into an in-depth review of the OSI networking model without even mentioning what hubs, routers, and switches are. He then works his way into explaining TCP/IP and TCP/IP subnetting, a notoriously confusing concept for beginners, and in truth, mid-level techies may be temporarily confused here as well. Unlike many other CCNA study guides, which touch briefly on subnetting and then provide a list of common subnet masks for rote memorization, Lammle really wants you to understand why certain masks and address ranges work. His objective is for his readers to be able to compute subnets on the fly--a task which many network professionals fake to this day--and as such, he takes you deep into the binary mysteries of TCP/IP. The explanations here are real migraine-inducers, but that's more the fault of TCP/IP's innate complexity than Lammle's explanations. Lammle himself admits that he expects his audience to have to reread the TCP/IP chapter at least once--but if you take the time to bear down, do the math, and really study , you'll never need to read another chapter on TCP/IP subnetting again. The next sections of the book deal with Cisco routing commands, and it is here that the CCNA Study Guide truly shines. Cisco router commands are infamous for providing the user with floods of information, and the incoming tide of network statistics often sends fledgling CCNA trainees into info-shock. When you have three pages worth of data zipping by on your screen, how do you decide what the important bits are? Lammle does an extremely good job of walking his students through the various Cisco commands. He explains what each command is meant to do, shows how it's done, and then shows you what you should be looking for after it's done. The chapters here are methodical, thorough, and dense, but they hang together excellently. The only problem is that Lammle assumes you'll be practicing these commands on an actual router--and many CCNA students don't have a practice lab to work with. However, if you purchase the CCNA Virtual Lab , a highly recommended piece of software that simulates Cisco routers in an connected environment, you'll have the next best thing to hands-on router experience. A preview edition of the Virtual Lab is included with the book. The last section of the book is devoted to WAN protocols, and this part of the book is slightly disappointing. While the details presented in the WAN chapters are solid, they seem slightly out of proportion: while Wide Area Networks, and in particular, ISDN, are a reasonably large part of the CCNA exam, the ISDN section here is all of 20 pages. It's not that there's not enough to pass, but Lammle doesn't provide his usual wealth of details in the final chapter. Like every good certification book, there are quizzes to test your skill, and you won't be lacking for choices here--seven "open answer" questions, 20 multiple-choice questions, and hands-on workshops grace the end of each chapter. The book ends with a 60-question final exam. The questions are moderately hard, and are a good test of your overall comprehension, but you can probably expect to find harder questions on the actual exam. Rounding out this book is a voluminous hands-on walk-through of Catalyst 1900 Switch configuration, a comprehensive list of CCNA router commands, and a 70-page glossary. In short, this guide is like a stern teacher: it's not always easy to follow, and it's sometimes frustrating. But by the time you're finished, you'll understand the material better than you could have ever dreamed. --William Steinmetz

Features & Highlights

  • A study guide for the revised exam covers Cisco IOS commands, RIP and IGRP routing protocols, configuring frame relay LMIs, WAN configurations, LAN segmentation, TCP/IP, and spanning-tree protocol.

Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Reviews

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Lammle is at it again and better than before!

I have been teaching computers for over 2 years and in that time I have used Todd Lammle's 1st edition of the CCNA Study Guide as a basis for the course outline. Todd Lammle is one of the most respected names in the industry and his new book is now updated for the latest CCNA exam, 640-507.
As with the 1st edition, the book is detailed and extremely accurate. This book covers each exam objective by breaking them down into ten chapters and 750 plus pages. Starting with internetworking and what it takes to make a network, Lammle gives the basics in an easy to understand a follow manner.
Adding Switching techniques is new and the detail is what you have come to expect from Lammle. TCP/IP is given more coverage and again Lammle makes the learning fun and easy. Moving on to the IOS and commands, IP Routing, VLANs, Network Management, Novell and access lists, WAN Protocols and an appendix that covers the Catalyst 1900 switch.
There are diagrams, router screen shots, labs, hands-on exercises, practice questions, figures, tables and so much more. You have everything you need to pass this exam first time around. Lammle's attention to detail is what makes this the standout performer of the year.

There is also a complete listing of the IOS commands used in the book coupled with one of the best glossaries I have ever seen. As if Lammle and Sybex haven't given you enough, that also included a cd-rom with the price of the book.

The cd-rom has practice tests and electronic versions of he book as well as the "Dictionary of Networking". Rounding out the package is the e-Trainer Demo of the CCNA as well as utilities from Boson Software. Once again Lammle has taken the hard part out of exam preparation and all you have to do is study.
41 people found this helpful
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Well worth the money

I have never been a fan of Sybex as I had bad experiences in the past with some of their texts. I have read many certification texts over the past couple years, and this one is one of the better ones I've read. It gives you all the theory and all the technical syntax you will need to pass the CCNA exam. I had no significant hands on experience with Cisco routers and used this book and the Virtual lab e-trainer as my only tools to prepare. I passed with a 946/1000. There are a few minor errors, but the Sybex site has caught those already. My only gripe is that the last 2 chapters on Access lists and WAN protocols are a little thin on details/explanations of terms. Probably could have elaborated more and written 3 or 4 chapters out of the 2. In any case, the text more than covered everything the CCNA test threw at me. I would highly recommend this text for anyone pursuing their CCNA. It is definitely well worth the money. If your goal is to pass the CCNA exam, then buy this book.
10 people found this helpful
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Must read prior to taking CCNA exam

Granted I've worked in the telecommunications arena for a little over 20 years, but I had virtually no direct exposure to routers prior to reading this book. Received the book about four months ago. Studied it continuously, taking all chapter tests each weekend, over and over until I could make over 90% on each test. Then took the practice test the same way. There are errors, but none so dramatic that will drive you off course. I also used the Virtual Lab. It's okay to give you basic command experience, but naturally doesn't substitute for real hands-on router experience. I'm lucky to have a router lab that I can use (three 2500's and two 4000's) that made all the difference in the world. After reading the book cover to cover three times and testing as I stated above, the results were gratifying: 924/1000 Great book, but you've really got to continually drill yourself until you feel 100% confident, then go blow the test away. I've already bought Lammle's CCNP books, looking forward to completing the next level.
7 people found this helpful
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Good luck

If this is the only book or material you are considering before taking the CCNA exam, you will need a lot of luck. Anyone that has taken the MCSE exams in the past can tell you the wide scale range of tests that Microsoft has had. This Cisco CCNA test is no difference. It requires the passing score of 849 and it consisted of 65 questions. I took my time preparing for this test by reading the ( Todd Lammle's ) book very slow and doing all the practice questions and lab, I also used the Virtual lab e-trainer for this exam and also ( CCNA routing and switching ) book. I completed over 1000 practice tests from both books and everything I could get from the net. My score for the book practice tests were 95 ~100% each time after studying and practicing for three months. I am not exaggerating or trying to scare anyone. But when I got the first question and I didn't even recognize and had to guess and then the next and next. Out of 65 questions, I only knew 4 questions for certainty and about 10 or less command related questions that were worded so differently. Not even one question on subneting or broadcast. I had to ask the attendant if they had loaded the right test even though I could read it at the left hand corner. The rest of the questions I had to guess. I even considered ending the test after first 15 questions but decided since I had paid for it I would complete it. I am MCSE so I've taken tests before and know how to eliminate trap questions but this, I was in shock. I would not have passed this reticular test even if I had attended classes and had real router hands on. It was so unrelated to this and other book and the test questions. So, if you're lucky and get a lowball test, then this book is enough after you download all the corrections. If not ,,,,,
6 people found this helpful
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Not bad, but use other reference material as well.

I prepared and passed my CCNA with this book (second edition) and the Exam Notes by the same author.
Firstly, the book is pretty well organized, and designed for a newbie to networking. It covers most of the information you need for the exam. The organization is however different from the exam itself (see cisco's web site) or the Exam Notes, so cross-referencing is a little difficult. There are several typos but most of them are indicated on the book's website on Sybex - this however is not well organized: all the corrections for all the editions of the book are on the same page (lots! trust me!) and you go through half of them to realize they have been corrected.
There are topics left out however, and the practice exams on the CD are different from the same ones in the book (not different exams, just a few questions changed here and there??). The practice exams are also too easy compared to the real exam and have a few errors (the errors in the practice exams and the book's electronic version are stated but you cannot download updated software). I recommend browsing the net to find lots of harder practice exams. The Exam Notes book amazingly picks-up the missed out material (Token Ring, FDDI, ATM) and is organized like the exam. There are several other missing items from the online practice tests I used, but since I wasn't tested on them, I cannot say for sure they are required.
All and all not a bad book, but a pretty hard exam anyway. I recommend getting a router simulator if you do not have much hands on, but I found the supported command list on the BOSON Router Simulator fell short several times (updates are frequent though.)
Strengths: several examples, labs, practice questions. Materiel organized to ease learning, not like the exam.
Weaknesses: missing items (picked up for the most part by the Exam Notes), unfriendly errata page, unable to update software or electronic book. The glossary is very sadly incomplete.
5 people found this helpful
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Get this Book!

This is a great great book to pass the Cisco CCNA exam. I am in the field and get limited exposure to Cisco equipment and networks, but this book reinforced what I knew and added a lot. Can you pass with this book alone. I think so, but as with anything, experience helps. I recommend getting the virtual lab e-trainer or router-sim to compliment this if you don't have unlimited access to Cisco routers and switches. Then you will definatly pass without fail. Again, great book, and very easy to read.
4 people found this helpful
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All you need to pass!

Great book for getting the details required for passing the CCNA exam. I had to download the errata and keep it with the book to ensure that the information provided was correct. I also purchased the Cisco Press ICND and Cisco Press CCNA Study Guide and found this to be easier to read and understand. Along with the RouterSim version 3.0 software I had no problems passing the exam on the first try.
4 people found this helpful
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Good, but definitely not intended for beginners

I have been employed in MIS for nearly 3 years. I thought this book was a great tool for passing the CCNA. However, upon loaning this book to a friend who was newer to the field, I realized that it is not aimed at someone new to internetworking. I recommend reading the Network+ book by Melissa Craft before tackling any of Lammle's study guides. Studying for the A+ test also provides a nice foundation for networking in general. Best of luck.
4 people found this helpful
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924 out of 1000 CCNA Exam Score!!

I took the Cisco ICND week long training course to prepare me for my CCNA - I was even more lost than when I started. After reading the material in this book, taking the chapter and preparation exams, and studying the accompanied electronic "flash cards" I was able to pass my CCNA, the first time, with a 924 out of 1000 score! A big thanks to Mr. Lammle for his efforts on this book!
3 people found this helpful
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What a Good Source to Pass CCNA,,WhoooooOOOh

I just read this book from cover to cover twice and pass CCNA 860 Score,i just spend 1-1/2 months reading this and practicing the Exam Essential 5.5 version,(practice test, Good One). the practice test are similar to actual one,it was a big help. the EE 5.5 explain much detail why your answer is wrong or right. I would Highly recommend this book and the practice for those aspiring CCNA.
Thank's Todd
Nat
3 people found this helpful