Cisco Certification: How To Become A Truly Valuable CCNA
Telepresence and Holography / Holograms - November 2008
Editor’s viewpoint on their differences, likenesses and future...
We all just recently viewed an historic CNN holographic interview on an historic Election Night. CNN stated this type of imaging has never been done before on National TV and I believe that. I haven’t seen anything like it. The live interview caught me by surprise and sure had the “wow” factor attached to it didn’t it? Here’s a link to the actual interview.
CNN Hologram Video
The question now has to be asked. Is it Telepresence?
I’m no expert on the subject but I’m going to throw my hat into the ring, go out on a limb and say yes, I believe it is. Although I know many video conferencing purists are rolling their eyes and grabbing their guns right about now with my statement.
While I do know that Telepresence still hasn’t been universally defined (Houston, we have a problem), here’s how I see it…. Broken down to its simplest form - “tele” (through electronic means) and “presence” (present). This is how I’m justifying my opinion by lumping holography and Telepresence together. Just as Telepresence is surely an offshoot of video conferencing, holographic imaging (like we viewed on CNN) surely has to be considered an offshoot of Telepresence. The interviewer was “telepresent” from Chicago and beamed into the CNN Election Headquarters. She was most assuredly - “telepresent”. There was negligible latency, the imaging was fantastic and both interviewers were rehearsed on what they would say. I’ve just recently read that CNN actually “downgraded” the experience to make it “movie” quality and not as good as it could have been. Maybe they thought us mere mortals would be shocked if they showed their complete hand. I have a feeling it was so big to them, they didn’t want it to get upstaged by the historic election. I’m willing to bet we’ll see the “true” power of this technology in the upcoming weeks and months when they can put the pedal to the medal and show it off without having it sidetracked.
What an amazing time for this technology (all differences and opinions aside). Telepresence Doctors, nurses, teachers, schools and healthcare (healthpresence) will benefit from the recent gains in this state-of-the-art industry whether holograms, Telepresence or holography. Airlines also have to see the threat to a portion of their business travel. Hell, who wants go through security and fly to Miami for a two-hour conference when you can look them in the eye via Telepresence?
Beam me up Scotty! Simply amazing…!
Visit the free Telepresence Forum for more information and discussion
Your Editor and Administrator - L II
"Ride on the Next Plane of Existence" TM

Telepresence Forum Free user discussion forum for anything & everything telepresence related. Learn about this new state-of-the-art immersive technology, view new product videos, and keep up to date on relevant 24/7 breaking telepresence news on the Telepresence Forum.
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I've been active in the Cisco Certification track for four years, working my way from the CCNA to the coveted Cisco Certified Internetwork Expert title, and during that time I've conducted job interviews and casual conversations with hundreds of CCNAs and CCNA candidates. The CCNA is an exciting beginning to your Cisco career, but just having the certification simply isn't enough. A recruiter or interviewer isn't going to be impressed just with the cert; you've got to have some real-world knowledge to back it up.
I've been down that road myself, and sat on both sides of the CCNA job interview table. With that in mind, I'd like to offer to you some tips on becoming a truly valuable and employable CCNA. 1. Get some hands-on experience. I know the trap well; you can't get experience until you get a CCNA, and you can't get a CCNA without real experience. Well, actually, you can, but do you want to? Working on simulators is fine to a certain extent, but don't make the classic mistake of depending on them. I've seen plenty of CCNAs who were put in front of a set of routers and really didn't know what to do or how to put together a simple configuration, and had NO idea how to begin troubleshooting. Simulators fail to help you develop the analytical and logical skills that you must have to be an effective troubleshooter. There are CCNA classes that offer you the chance to work with industry experts on real Cisco equipment. Beyond that, you can put together your own CCNA rack for less than $500 by buying used routers. Some people think that's a lot of money, but this is the foundation of your career. Treat it that way. The work you do now is the most important work you'll ever do. Do it on real Cisco equipment. The skills I learned as a CCNA helped me all the way up to the CCIE. Besides, after you get your CCNA (and after that, hopefully you'll choose to pursue the CCNP), you can always get some of your money back by selling the equipment. The hands-on experience you gain this way is invaluable.
(I'll also soon be offering remote equipment access for CCNAs and CCNPs. Watch for it!) 2. Know binary math. Do NOT go the easy route of memorizing a subnet mask chart for the CCNA exam. I know some people brag about being able to pass the CCNA exam without really understanding binary math. I've seen those people on the other side of the interview table, and they're not laughing when I ask them to do a subnetting question. They're not laughing when they can't explain or create a VLSM scheme. That chart does nothing to help you understand what's going on. If you can add and know the difference between a one and a zero, you can do binary math. Don't let the name intimidate you. Become a REAL CCNA -- learn binary math ! 3. Run "show" and "debug" commands. No commands help you truly understand how things work in a Cisco network than show and debug commands. As you progress through the Cisco certification ranks, you'll be glad you started using these at the CCNA level. Do you need to know these commands for the exam? Probably not. Do you need them to be successul in the real world? Absolutely. The Cisco certification track has been great to me, and it can boost your career as well, whether you stop at the CCNA, CCNP, or go all the way to the CCIE. It's the skills you develop today that will truly make you a networking engineer. Don't take shortcuts or get the attitude of "just passing the exam". It's what you achieve after the exam that counts, and it's the work you put in before passing the exam that makes those achievements possible. Good luck! To your success, Chris Bryant
CCIE #12933 Chris Bryant, CCIE (TM) #12933, has been active in the Cisco certification community for years. He has written several books that have helped CCNA candidates around the world achieve the coveted CCNA certification, including several concentrating on binary math conversions and subnetting questions that the average CCNA candidate will need to answer on their CCNA exams. He is the owner of The Bryant Advantage (http://www.thebryantadvantage.com) where he teaches affordable world-class CCNA courses via the Internet, and sells his popular Cisco certification books. He's proud to have helped CCNA candidates around the world achieve their career goals. Mr. Bryant's books and courses are sold on his site, on eBay, and on several other major Cisco certification sites.
To learn more about Telepresence, the revolutionary new style of immersive video conferencing; visit these websites:
Telepresence - "Ride on the Next Plane of Existence" - Telepresence
Telepresence Web Portal - Telepresence Internet web portal
Telepresence Report - 24/7 breaking Telepresence related news and information
Via Telepresence - Video conferencing via Telepresence
Telepresence Forum - Free user discussion forum for everything Telepresence related
Telepresence Today - Telepresence information and editor qualified headline news
Telepresence Resource Directory - Telepresence web resource directory
Telepresence Tube - Telepresence videos, pictures and more
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Demand for Telepresence Solutions is Exploding Reports Telepresence and Videoconferencing Insight Online Newsletter
Cisco Systems saw orders for 500 systems from December 2006 to April 2008 and a further 500 in the last five months. Other Telepresence vendors report a very high level of demand. Reflecting this enormous interest in Telepresence, readers of the Newsletter have more than doubled in this period.
The History of Video Conferencing – Moving Ahead at the Speed of Video
No new technology develops smoothly, and video conferencing had more than its
share of bumps along the way before becoming the widely used communications
staple it is today. The history of video conferencing in its earliest form goes
back to the 1960's, when AT&T introduced the Picturephone at the World's Fair in
New York.
Train Signal Releases Third New Cisco CCNP Course: Cisco ONT "Optimizing Converged Cisco Networks"
New Cisco ONT video training covers advanced Remote Access Security and VPN Client Configuration plus 642-845 exam changes.
HaiVision bridges Telepresence & Video Conferencing With Codian
HaiVision Systems Inc. (Montreal, Canada), the leader in high performance network video technology, today announces interoperability between the HaiVision hai1000 and Codian's HD MCU 4500 Series.
WBS Connect and Digital Video Enterprises Form Strategic Partnership To Offer High Definition Video Conferencing and Telepresence Solutions
WBS Connect, a Colorado-based global technology services company today announced they have entered into a strategic partnership with equipment manufacturer, Digital Video Enterprises (DVE) to offer Virtual In Person, high-definition video conferencing and telepresence services over its worldwide carrier-class, IP network.
First Come, First Serve Basis Free Video Conferencing for the Rest of Us
New free video conferencing service site PalBee.com launched. Its Flash-based user interface offers unlimited free video conferencing sessions of one hour each for five video attendees. Although current beta version of the service allows 10 simultaneous video conference sessions, PalBee will be upgraded to host more simultaneous sessions in near future.
Cisco Systems, LifeSize Communications, RADVISION, TANDBERG and the CEO of Cisco Systems win Awards from Videoconferencing Insight Newsletter for thei
Awards are for: Telepresence Company of the Year 2007 (Cisco), Videoconferencing Company of the Year 2007 (LifeSize), Unified Visual Communications Company of the Year 2007 (RADVISION), The Most Innovative Videoconferencing Technology of the Year 2007(TANDBERG) and Industry Leader of the Year 2007 (John Chambers, CEO Cisco). They were announced by online Specialist Newsletter Videoconferencing Insight at www.vcinsight.com on 9 January 2008.
Train Signal Releases New Cisco Video Training: CCENT, Interconnection Cisco Networking Devices
New CCENT training offers complete coverage for the ICDN1, first 2007 replacement exam for Cisco's entry level CCNA certification.
iLinc Multi-User Video Offers Better, Cheaper Alternative to Traditional Video Conferencing Systems: Video Conferencing Using Internet is a Standar
Modern communications technology has literally changed the definition of holding a meeting. Even with all this technology some solutions providers insist companies should continue to invest in expensive, dedicated end-to-end infrastructure. iLinc Communications, Inc. (AMEX:ILC), a leading developer of Web conferencing software and audio conferencing services, maintains you likely already have everything you need to host a successful online video conference and data collaboration meeting.

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