Henry Benjamin has written: 'CCIE Security Exam Certification Guide (CCIE Self-Study)' 'CCNP Practical Studies'
CCIE study tools available at IExpert are Online vRack Acces, Self-Paced Workbooks, Videos on Demand and Audio on Demand. Another CCIE tool available is a Blended Learning Self-Study Bundle.
There is a lot of knowledge about CCIE, and self-study may be difficult. You can find some CCIE information on Cisco's official website, or search for ThinkM in the TG group, and join the group chat to get some CCIE related information. However, the CCIE courses are relatively difficult, and it may take more than half a year for self-study. If you can find a suitable method, you may be able to complete the CCIE study faster.
Stephen Hutnik has written: 'Cisco CCIE all-in-one lab study guide' -- subject(s): Certification, Electronic data processing personnel, Examinations, Internetworking (Telecommunication), Study guides
study and keep studying the materials of the course
To pass the coveted CCIE, you required to pass to level exams. First one is written which can be prepared through workbooks, video & audio but you should prepare seriously for 2 day lab test.
You would need to build a CCIE rack at home to connect network connections with many different computers. In addition, the CCIE rack provides space for security cameras and other electronics in the house.
Every Degree have its own worth .While CISCO CCIE Data Center is a professional certification.Its best certification for you if you are interested in computer networking.
The IP Expert website offers some tips on the CCIE lab preparation exam. Some of these tips are: prepare 6-9 months before, read a lot and have a lot of practice, select a reliable CCIE training partner.
Your local Pennsylvania education forums would be a good place to ask about ccie schools in the state. Either that or contact your local education department and ask there.
"Upon careful consideration regarding this question, I have decided that CCIE Security is a good company. CCIE Security will allow you to get good value for your money. There is also a high demand for CCIE Security."
I would suggest to start with CCIE R&S. This will provide you a rock-solid foundation for any of your future endeavors. After the R&S I think you need to study the market and see where the Cisco products are being used mostly. It doesn't make sense to do CCIE in Data Storage when Cisco has only a niche market share. I would suggest think about doing Wireless (WiFi is the future, period.) If you want fancy stuff, and plan to move into consumer market, then go for Voice or Security. Either way, go for R&S first, and then for any other track. Plus, Double-CCIE sounds manly and macho ;)