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Michael Morris: From the Field

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Tips on spending your time well at Cisco Networkers, plus: bring back the CCIE party!!

Cisco Live (Networkers) registration opened this week.

Cisco Live

As with previous years, I am excited to attend. But this year is particularly exciting since I have attended enough conferences to achieve CCIE NetVet status. So, now I get:

  • Access to a lounge reserved exclusively for NetVet and CCIE delegates.
  • An exclusive NetVet badge enabling everyone to acknowledge your NetVet status.
  • Your name in lights at the Keynote session as you and other NetVets are acknowledged on a rotating screen credit.
  • Preferential pre-party champagne reception and early access to the Customer Appreciation Party.
  • Lunch with John Chambers (if they have that again).

My "name in lights" is enough to sell me on the conference. ;-)

Cisco Live


Seriously, Networkers is a good opportunity to learn if you have a plan. I went to my first Networkers, signed up for random courses, and didn't have the best learning experience. It felt disjointed attending 1-2 hours sessions on a variety of topics. After that first Networkers, I learned to have a training plan beforehand, and then pick Networkers sessions around that plan. At a high level I pick a technology track (let's say data center), then I do the following:

  • Pick a day-long Techtorial at the beginning of the week in that technology area (in this case, data center).
  • Schedule training sessions during the week in the same technology area.
  • Leave time in the schedule for the World of Solutions (vendors). That's where all the free stuff is and where you can learn about interesting products.
  • Schedule your free certification exam late in the week after the learning is done, yet fresh in your mind.

This creates a very nice training platform for the week. Mixing technology tracks inside of Networkers doesn't provide enough insight for real learning, so pick an area and focus on it. I have passed two CCIE Written Exams in the last two years using this plan.


But, now for the most important part of Networkers....partying!!! Which brings me to the most important part of this blog....."Hello Cisco, bring back the CCIE Party!". Three years ago, before Cisco Networkers 2005 in Las Vegas, I received an e-mail from Cisco inviting me to the CCIE party which would be part of the general conference appreciation event (party) on the last day. I thought that was a nice touch and signed up. When I arrived at the conference appreciation event I walked around for a while before making my way inside and saw the sign for the CCIE party. I was expecting it to be in a conference room off the first floor....maybe get a free t-shirt. Wow, was I wrong. I got on an elevator and was shot to the 55th floor of the Palms Casino and walked out to the Ghost Bar.

Words cannot describe the view of Las Vegas from the open-air Ghost Bar. Not to mention the endless supply of drinks, shrimp the size of my fist, and a beautiful waitress who took a lot of my money that night. Now that was a PARTY! They had to pry me out of that place around 3 AM. My friend called half way through to see if I would like to meet him downstairs.....yeah, sorry bud, see you tomorrow. All that work for the CCIE was starting to pay off. Networkers 2006, also in Las Vegas, had the CCIE party at the Hard Rock Cafe. A nice party, but nothing like the year before. Then last year - in LA even - no CCIE party. :-( What gives Cisco? So, I am issuing a Cisco Subnet challenge to our namesake......BRING BACK THE CCIE PARTY! We need it after suffering through those labs. What's a couple hundred-grand for your most loyal and experienced professionals? I expect something on par with the Ghost Bar too. I'm sure Orlando has something.

Absolutely!!!

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You are absolutely correct, the CCIE party is one of the highlights! For people who have already made significant investments of their own (and/or their company's) into Cisco equipment, Kool-Aid and all that!

Upping the price of the CCIE lab exam is obviously signifying a money-maker on Cisco's part and yet labs are still booked 6-8 months in advance! So give some back!

It's a great time for many of the CCIE's to meet each other, or see each other again! It's easier to run into folks you know in a more limited (select?) crowd than the larger masses of the entire conference!

I'm all for the partying and looking forward to seeing whether my commentary about last year's lack makes any headway! So count my vote in! (or do we get one vote per CCIE?) :)

Scott

Join the "Bring back the Party" group at Cisco Live 2008

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I've started a group at the Cisco Live 2008 website; the group name is "Bring Back the CCIE Party". If you're attending in Orlando this year, join the group!

I heard such tremendous things about the 2005 party that I'm very disappointed not to have one in 2008.

Also, the benefits quoted above seem to be for the European Networkers - I hope we get SOMETHING here in the US.

give the toy back to the child

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I have wanted to go to Networkers since I was a kid, so to speak. Never had the budget (I live in an Eastern European country) - until recently, but the conference in Barcelona was fully booked way in advance. Now that I am a CCIE and have the budget to cross the Atlantic too, I am very disappointed that there is no CCIE appreciation anything (not even discounted seats, let alone the party). Maybe we are too many CCIEs and Cisco became too poor?

Mihai

I prefer a J-Tech event

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I prefer a J-Tech event versus Cisco Networkers.

Blow me

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What the hell is J-Tech? Some Juniper wannabe event?

The Party Is On: You've been heard loud and clear

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Michael and the CCIE Community going to Cisco Live 2008,
As you know by now, having received your invitation and most likely accepted it, Cisco is going to hold a CCIE party at Cisco Live 2008 in Orlando.
CCIEs who have registered to attend Cisco Live 2008 have received their invitation last Monday.
On behalf of Learning@Cisco, and Cisco at large, thanks for your loyalty, passion, and continuous feedback.
Best regards,

Fred Weiller
Director, Learning@Cisco Marketing

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About Michael Morris

Michael Morris is a communications engineering manager at a $3 billion high-tech company. His background is in enterprise WANs working with telcos, and developing large-scale routing designs. He has worked on networks at government and corporate organizations, including networks at two Fortune 10 companies. In his current role, he leads large-scale IT networking projects and develops and maintains architectural standards for data networks, storage area networks, IP Telephony, and security. Michael is a CCIE and has 11 years experience in networking and communications, including four years as a paratrooper in the U.S. Army. He has a bachelor's degree in MIS from the University at Buffalo. Recently, he was awarded the Network Professional Association® (NPA) Professional Excellence and Innovation Award for his work on network architecture, templates and enterprise MPLS design.

Contact him.

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The opinions expressed in this Weblog are those of the writer and may not represent the opinions of Network World.

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