Cisco CCIE Routing and Switching certifies expert-level knowledge of networking across various LAN and WAN interfaces and a variety of routers and switches. The CCIE certification is both the most difficult and the most prestigious certification available from Cisco. In fact, the CCIE certification has received numerous awards from computing and certification magazines and web sites. Cisco offers several types of CCIE certifications, with the CCIE Routing/Switching being the most popular CCIE track. Each CCIE certification requires that the candidate pass both a written and practical (lab) exam. This Quick Reference prepares readers specifically for the CCIE Routing/Switching written exam. As a final exam preparation tool, the CCIE Routing and Switching v4.0 Quick Reference provides a concise review of all objectives on the the CCIE Routing and Switching written exam. This digital Quick Reference provides you with detailed, graphical-based information, highlighting only the key topics in cram-style format. With this document as your guide, you will review topics on IP, IP routing, non-IP desktop protocols, bridging and switch-related technologies. This fact-filled Quick Reference allows you to get all-important information at a glance, helping you focus your study on areas of weakness and enhancing your memory retention of essential exam concepts.
“This is one of the very best baseball books in years.” Booklist, Starred Review Reaching the major leagues is a pipe dream for most young baseball players in America. Very few ever get to live it out. A select number of those players face the elation and frustration of getting to play in just one major league game. The Cup of Coffee Club: 11 Players and Their Brush with Baseball History tells the unique stories of eleven of these players. It details their struggles to reach the major leagues, their one moment in the limelight, and their struggles to get back. They include a former Major League Baseball manager, the son of a Baseball Hall of Famer, and two different brothers of Hall of Famers. Exclusive interviews with each of the players provide insight into what that single seminal moment meant and how they dealt with the blow of never making another major league appearance again. Spanning half a century of baseball, each player’s journey to Major League Baseball is distinct, as is each of their responses to having played in just a single game. The Cup of Coffee Club shares their unique perspectives, providing a better understanding of just how special each major league game can be.
In recent years, a sense of community has declined throughout the United States. This trend is especially evident among younger generations, whether measured by civic participation, political involvement, or religious affiliation. Central Community Church—an intercultural congregation located in Tampa Bay’s urban corridor—has responded to this trend by promoting “community” as an organizational metaphor. The Diversity Paradox: Seeking Community in an Intercultural Church explores the ways in which that metaphor was co-constructed by Central Community’s racially/ethnically diverse leaders and members, as well as limitations and tensions that emerged from those efforts. After surveying the three prevailing views of community: community as physical space, community as disembodied concept, and community as communicative process, Jenkins builds upon four years of ethnographic fieldwork in order to fully understand this community. He concludes by introducing an original theoretical concept called the “diversity paradox”: an emphasis placed upon one potential understanding of diversity which, paradoxically, limits opportunities for alternative expressions of difference.
Certain to be a collector's item, The Game That Was is baseball's family album -- a unique compilation of the game's greatest players relaxing with their families, hunting with their friends, and hanging out with the neighborhood kids. From the first All-Star Game and the planting of the ivy at Wrigley Field to Jackie Robinson in his debut season and Ernie Banks on his first day as a Cub, it's a look at one of the world's largest private collections of never-before-seen baseball photography, containing hundreds of thousands of negatives dating from the 1930s to the present and depicting more than 10,000 players.
Cisco CCIE Routing and Switching certifies expert-level knowledge of networking across various LAN and WAN interfaces and a variety of routers and switches. The CCIE certification is both the most difficult and the most prestigious certification available from Cisco. In fact, the CCIE certification has received numerous awards from computing and certification magazines and web sites. Cisco offers several types of CCIE certifications, with the CCIE Routing/Switching being the most popular CCIE track. Each CCIE certification requires that the candidate pass both a written and practical (lab) exam. This Quick Reference prepares readers specifically for the CCIE Routing/Switching written exam. As a final exam preparation tool, the CCIE Routing and Switching v4.0 Quick Reference provides a concise review of all objectives on the the CCIE Routing and Switching written exam. This digital Quick Reference provides you with detailed, graphical-based information, highlighting only the key topics in cram-style format. With this document as your guide, you will review topics on IP, IP routing, non-IP desktop protocols, bridging and switch-related technologies. This fact-filled Quick Reference allows you to get all-important information at a glance, helping you focus your study on areas of weakness and enhancing your memory retention of essential exam concepts.
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