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  • Do you want to become RHCE / MCSE /CCNA ?
     
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MCITP: Enterprise Administrator Certification Training Windows Server 2008

MCITP: Enterprise Administrator is the equivalent of MCSE for Windows Server 2008.

MCITP: Enterprise Administrator training boot camp validates your ability to:

  • Design Windows Server infrastructures, evaluate and recommend new technology solutions

  • Serve as an escalation point for infrastructure issues

  • Develop client and server best practices for other teams, such as engineering, development, and operations

  • Keep policy current for authentication, identity, and access management

  • Provide guidance in implementing security policies that affect the infrastructure on multiple levels

  • Participate in application reviews on security and

  • Ensure that the applications adhere to standard security guidelines and practices.

 

 

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MCSE : Security Specialist

GET CERTIFIED IN JUST 18 DAYS - 2003 PATH

Our 18 day accelerated MCSE 2003: Security+ Training BootCamp provides information technology professionals with the knowledge and skills necessary to install, configure, support, and troubleshoot Microsoft® Windows 2000- and 2003-based networks with a focus on information security in the enterprise. This is an accelerated course, designed for computer professionals that require effective, real-world skill-building and timely certification.

Now Available MCSE Certification Training

The MCSE 2003: Security+ Boot Camp delivers the greatest value on the market for Windows 2003 Certification Training. During the program, students will achieve the following certifications:

  • Microsoft Certified Professional (MCP)
  • Microsoft Certified Systems Administrator (MCSA)
  • CompTIA Security+
  • Microsoft Certified Systems Engineer (MCSE) 

Call About Onsite Courses at your location

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Microsoft MCSE MCSA Certification Training Boot Camp Class Course

The MCSE Boot Camp is unlike any other.  With our  class, you will learn more.

Our MCSE 2003: Security+ Accelerated Certification Program is the most effective, efficient way to learn how to successfully design, plan, and implement a network infrastructure, Active Directory® infrastructure, and client deployment on the Windows Server 2003 platform. 

Daily lectures, labs, and review sessions are supplemented by a combination of:

  • Proprietary Lab Manual & Microsoft Courseware - developed in conjunction with Microsoft, adapting Microsoft Official Curriculum to address the demands of accelerated learners
  • Authorized CompTIA Security+ Lab Manual & Courseware
  • Self Test™ or Transcender® Testing Software

Our MCSE 2003: Security+ Program:

  • Allows you to achieve your certifications in a fraction of the time of 'traditional training' while delivering industry-leading exam passing percentages
  • Helps students grasp complex technical concepts more easily by identifying and catering to individual student learning styles through a mixed visual, auditory and kinesthetic-tactual delivery system
  • Enhances retention by employing accelerated learning techniques focused on committing information to long-term memory

NT’s competition

Linux, a spinoff of the UNIX OS, has become a viable competitor of NT. Costing nothing, it offers the functionality of UNIX without the price tag, and beats the Microsoft Windows NT Server Enterprise Edition by $3,999 (www.microsoft.com). Public support means documentation is abundant, if occasionally zealous. The active user community helps spur application proliferation and quickly addresses system bugs, quirks and limitations.

Linux’s excellent scalability, stability and clustering (the process by which multiple physical servers share a processing load and act as a single unit) are key options that translate into greater server availability than NT currently offers.

On the down side, both Linux’s and Apache’s line- editing interfaces take a back seat to IIS/NT’s GUI. This must partially account for the relative difficulty a company can encounter trying to find qualified Linux administrators, although the limitation has not hindered Apache’s capture of more than half the Web server market share.

What are the compelling characteristics of Apache? On the server end, Apache shares several traits with Linux. It enjoys the advantages of public support, including a truly negligible price tag, and shares with Linux unimpeachable stability and functionality. It is very stable and scalable, with support for large disk arrays, clustering options, fault tolerance and load balancing. These features, critical to ecommerce sites, can be especially useful when it is difficult to predict the number of requests a server will handle and when companies want to leverage existing equipment and networks as much as possible. The high-performance systems on which Apache/Linux runs can typically handle hundreds of thousands of requests with little effort. At the application development level, ColdFusion and ASP work in similar ways. Both make Web pages that include special tags. A browser that sees a ColdFusion (/ pagename.cf) or ASP (/pagename.asp) page sends a request to the application server. The server interprets the page’s tags and replaces them with the information or database queries specified by the coding of the page. It then sends the completed page to the Web server, which passes the page back to the browser.

The primary differences between the two options revolve around their prices and their interfaces. ColdFusion pulls about $1,300 (or about $4,000 for the Enterprise version with Dynamic Load Balancing and Network and Service-Level Failover) at the Allaire site (www.allaire.com). In a one-to-one comparison against ASP, ColdFusion looks wonderful, offering sophisticated functionality (such as page encryption and scheduled publishing) that the Microsoft product lacks. This simple analysis is deceptive, however, since ASP integrated with IIS offers functions much more comparable to ColdFusion than ASP by itself.