Last time I looked at net+, which was a good 12+ years ago, they were almost too generic to be practical. Vendor agnostic, maybe enough to edumacate a developer into what a network is (heaven forbid), but not enough that you're going to show up on a job and do much of anything aside from having to take another class in $vendor. Good thing with Cisco classes is most other network vendors tend to just clone their cli close enough that even if a bit different to keep from being sued, it's intuitive enough you can hop on another switch and survive. Unless buying Juniper switches, then start over again. Arista, Brocade, HP, even 3com (now hp too) tend to be somewhat "close enough" that a foundation in Cisco won't have you totally lost should one get dropped in your lap. And chances are good you'll find Cisco in an employer anyways. "Nobody gets fired for buying Cisco", or at least used to before outsourcing made their software bug-licious and unstable as anything/everything else, only costs more now with same commodity hardware just like everyone else. Hit a goodwill, oddly I hunt books there (non-tech), but find they tend to have a lot of older versions of tech books, including A+, N+, and other comptia books that are probably only slightly less relevant enough to check out for 2-3 bucks. Or piratebay. ;) -mb On 06/01/2015 01:07 PM, Anthony Radzykewycz wrote: > I do not know the content that is in the Network+ exam, but I could > see about finding out, if you are truly interested. --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss