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CCIE test and numbering

A lot of people have misconceptions about the CCIE (Cisco Certified Internetwork Expert) program and its numbering. I was consulting at Cisco in 1993 when I first heard about the program and inquired about participating. Brad Wright was the program manager and he knew what I had been doing with Cisco (CLI development, consulting, and training) and told me what I needed to do. I quickly re-worked my schedule and took the written qualification test, attended the Cisco Troubleshooting class, and setup a time for the hands-on test, all within two weeks.

In those days, the hands-on test was two days. One day of build-it and one day of fix-it after they break it. Stuart Biggs, one of the senior Customer Engineers at Cisco, assembled the lab gear and wrote up the test. The network gear was AGS, AGS+, and MGS routers. Cisco didn’t have switches at that time. I kept Stuart running around getting documentation, appliques (for the AGS gear), cables, and other things. I don’t know which of the two of us was busier.

Regarding the numbering, the folks at Cisco didn't want to start with the number '1'.  So they decided to start with 1024, (2 ** 10), a common binary number.  The lab was assigned the first number, 1024, and they placed a plaque with that number on the door (someone told me that the plaque has been kept and moved to one of the new test labs). Stuart was awarded the first real number, CCIE # 1025, because he created the test. I passed the hands-on test, designing and building the network in one day, then fixing the things he broke in just over half a day. I was awarded the next number, CCIE # 1026, in August, 1993, the first non-Cisco person to achieve the CCIE and the first to take the test. A bunch of Cisco employees soon followed and many of them are still working at Cisco. Something like five of the first ten CCIEs work in the same building at Cisco.

Occasionally, someone will tell me that they met a CCIE who has a number lower than either Stuart's or mine and I just laugh. There's a Cisco web page where you can check the status of CCIEs. You have to know their CCIE registration name. It is a good thing to check when interviewing CCIEs.

-Terry

Comments

 

pvogelsang said:

#  Marc La Porte Says:

August 22nd, 2007 at 11:17 am

Hi Terry,

Great story. I didn’t know that Stuart Biggs actually wrote the first lab.

Anyways, I tried to check your status on Cisco's page, but I didn’t get it. Under what exact name are your registered?

Thanks

Marc

CCIE Candidate

September 27, 2007 2:36 PM
 

CCIE test and numbering « IT Consultant/Network Engineer said:

Pingback from  CCIE test and numbering « IT Consultant/Network Engineer

November 21, 2007 3:20 PM
 

Terry Slattery - the very first Cisco CCIE in history « CertProject said:

Pingback from  Terry Slattery - the very first Cisco CCIE in history « CertProject

January 27, 2008 11:52 AM
 

CCIE-Nummern : Security-Planet.de said:

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January 29, 2008 8:19 AM
 

Cisco CCIE History - David???s Cisco Networking Blog said:

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January 30, 2008 4:21 PM
 

Who is First Person Of CCIE « Mranuwat’s Weblog said:

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February 27, 2008 9:49 PM
 

http://connection.netcordia.com/blogs/terrys_blog/archive/2007/08/16/ccie-test-and-numbering.aspx said:

March 20, 2008 1:53 AM
 

Who was the first CCIE? « #sh ip route vrf CCIE said:

Pingback from  Who was the first CCIE? « #sh ip route vrf CCIE

October 12, 2008 7:53 AM
 

Top CCIE’s « #sh ip route vrf CCIE said:

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October 16, 2008 10:32 AM

About tslattery

Terry Slattery, CCIE #1026, is a senior network engineer with decades of experience in the internetworking industry. Prior to joining Chesapeake NetCraftsmen as a full time consultant, Terry was the founder and CTO of Netcordia, and inventor of NetMRI, a suite of network management products. Terry started Netcordia as a consulting company in 2000 and transitioned to a network management product company in 2003. During the consulting days, he used his network design and implementation skills to lead a team in the design and implementation of a high availability network at a brokerage clearing house. Terry is the former President and founder of Chesapeake Computer Consultants, Inc., a networking and computer systems training and consulting company. He co-invented and patented the vLab(tm) internet-based remote lab system. He is co-author of the McGraw Hill text Advanced IP Routing in Cisco Networks. Terry led the team that developed the current Cisco IOS user interface under contract to Cisco Systems. Terry is experienced in the design and installation of large TCP/IP based networks and is a successful network protocol instructor. He is the second Cisco Certified Internetworking Expert (CCIE) #1026 and the first outside of Cisco. He enjoys membership on the Vanderbilt University Engineering School’s Industrial Advisory Board and the IEEE.

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