Customers can do cost comparisons between private and public.
Long story short: I’m launching Ansible for Networking Engineers self-paced course today. It’s already online and you can start whenever you wish.
Now for the details…
Isn’t there already an Ansible for Networking Engineers webinar? Yes.
So what’s the difference? Glad you asked ;)
Read more ...It looks like one of the best (or worst) kept secrets about the CCIE has finally come to pass. This week, Cisco announced that there is a new program in place to recertify your CCIE without the need to continually retake the written exam. How is this going to measure up?
The idea behind continual recertification is very simple. Rather than shut down what you’ve got going on every 18 months to spend time studying for an exam, Cisco is giving current CCIEs and CCDEs the option of applying credit from educational sessions toward recertifying their credentials.
This is very similar to the way that it works in for a doctor or a lawyer. There are courses that you can take that provide a certain number of “points” for a given class. When you accumulate 100 points in a two year span, you can apply those points to recertification.
The credits are good for a maximum of three years from the date earned. You can’t carry them over between recertification periods or bank them in case your certification expires. Once you use the points to recert, you start back up the treadmill again.
In this video, David Bombal demonstrates how to configure VLANs on Cisco switches using Python.
Learn how ATMC gained optimal control over the inbound traffic by using IRP’s automated inbound commit control feature, minimized latency and packet loss,
The post Inbound Traffic Engineering in Practice (ATMC case study) appeared first on Noction.
Cavium and Aon are customers.
The post Worth Reading: The forecast is still cloudy appeared first on rule 11 reader.
‘Cloud is not a place, it’s a method.’