The previous exam was the JPR, and the new exam was introduced in a 6-hour format compared with the JPR that was 8 hours long. I was also taking the exam completely remote in my home office. This is why the experience was unique. For me, taking the exam remotely made it feel more comfortable.
The proctor was available via video call for questions regarding the exam format, and all the necessary information and instructions were available digitally for the exam. Again, it was a really enjoyable experience taking this bad boy from the comfort of my home office chair and desk. I felt lucky to have the opportunity. I did have time to check over answers, but I in no way, shape, or form walked through the exam as though it were a breeze.
I have a deep appreciation for the complexity of the protocols, and the brilliant minds who created them. If you can afford the up-front costs, then by all accounts it will pay itself back in the long run, and more. Your confidence will increase, your job prospects will increase. Mastering them can only be a positive thing. Please comment if you do! The more people read my stuff, the more motivation I have to write even more. It gets kind of addictive. Also agree that while studying for JNCIE I realized that I started to contribute more to my team and have more technical conversations with people.
The nerves will carry you through to making sure you know it al inside-out. Feel the pressure, and use it to motivate yourself to the next-level.
It leaks out of your brain via your ear, and directly to the floor…. Had this sort of experience at a recent interview, Chris — you defined it so well. Always an interesting read on network funtimes. Haha thank you! I hope your interview went well. What an inspiring journey and some great tips for those of us who are just starting out on the Junos journey, like me.
I was truly excited to hear you made it! How long do you think is a good recovery period after studying relentlessly for two years? Or are you jumping headfirst into your next IE to keep the ball rolling? Time to do the associate and specialist level is what really is killing my project. Always lived junos. Congrats on the achievement. It must be a hard exam.
For sure your dedication and contact with other engineers were a key help on that. I wonder if you can disclose a bit of your lab environment. I am trying to get materials to study and define which computer to buy in order to make a decent lab. Could you here or in a new post give us details on this matter? Hi Fabrico! If it does, you know what stats to go for if you choose to buy a physical box!
Hi Chris, congratulations on this great achievement, it is something that many of us who are passionate about the networks at some point would like to obtain.
If it is possible that you can answer me, the questions you have during the exam are multiple-choice or you have to develop the answer and justify it.
Hi Diego. Hi Chris. Thanks for sharing your journey. And wow! Just wondering if I will manage this with 2 little kids and a very demanding job in a Telco. I thought it would be possible to do it in the next 6 months. Not so sure now. Keep at it Samuel! Whether or not it takes six months depends on where you are in your knowledge right now.
Keep the motivation up though, you can do it! Your email address will not be published. December 2, December 17, Chris Views 14 Comments. In my opinion, yes. For me it was five working days later. September 12, Chris 2. Although after reading this I am more nervous. The no-partial credit bit sounds especially scary Reply Good!
Reply And in that moment, on the day, sat at that laptop, it all disappears. Others look at what they need to get the job they want to have, then pursue the certification proactively.
In fact, it should be more than a destination; see it as a stepping stone to the expert-level certification in the Enterprise Routing and Switching track. The company has carved out and established a cornerstone niche in the enterprise routing and switching market that will likely be around for years to come.
Even if you pursue Cisco or other vendor certifications as a primary path, being certified to work with Juniper technology will only do you good. Any Juniper certification is going to be useful for learning new skills.
While many certifications are vendor-neutral, Juniper certs are decidedly not. Someone who holds a Junos-based cert has demonstrated both a general level of knowledge and comfort with the specific Juniper applications their position needs.
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