As anyone in IT knows Cisco IronPort training courses, CCNA and F5 training are all necessary in advancing your career in networking. Such classes teach you the basics of Cisco routers and switches, load balancing, and other basic things you need in order to manage and setup computer networks in business environments.
I was lucky enough to get some Cisco training in high school. In my junior and senior year of high school I was bussed to the local community college to receive three hours a day of CCNA classes. Through that program I was able to complete CCNA 1 and 2 and begin 3 and 4 in college.
In that time I learnt the basics of networking: switches, cable types, routers, subnetting, and more. Cisco classes offer hands on training as well as learning information from books. Since I’m a hands on learner, the labs which was all hands on experience were important to how I absorbed the Cisco curriculum.
Cisco labs include hands on training for installing the ends of Ethernet cables, managing and maintaining cisco routers and more. We were taught how to setup routers from scratche as well as trouble shoot lots of problems.
F5 training courses are as essential as Cisco. Like Cisco F5 is another big and commonly used name in IT. They provide an abundance of networking equipment to many major networks.