CTS 176: Cisco Wireless Certifications, Revamped




Clear To Send: Wireless Network Engineering show

Summary: <br> Things are evolving again at Cisco. This time with the certifications. Cisco is further driving the Intent-based networking model into certifications. There’s the need to drive multi-domain policy, introduce APIs and programmability. It could change the way we do things every day. Infrastructure engineers are becoming software developers? Maybe not completely but there are those who may want to do both. <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> New Cisco &amp; DevNet Certs with Mandy Whaley<br> <br> <br> <br> Organizations want more speed, more agility, and more simplicity but what happens underneath that simplification is not that simple. Chuck Robbins, during his keynote, mentioned the certifications have not evolved in 26 years. And that’s when he introduces the Cisco Certified DevNet certifications. Bringing software skills to networking and networking skills to software.<br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> Cisco wants you to build applications and capabilities. Which will bring value on top of the platforms Cisco is building.<br> <br> <br> <br> The DevNet Associate certification covers 80% software skills and 20% networking skills. The CCNA covers 80% networking skills and 20% software skills. The two are complimentary if you were to pursue NetDevOps.<br> <br> <br> <br> Cisco then took those CCNA specializations and turned them into technology concentrations. <br> <br> <br> <br> CCNP certifications are now available in enterprise, service provider, data center, security, and collaboration, which you need to pass the core exam and a concentration exam.<br> <br> <br> <br> DevNet Professional is earned by passing core exam and DevNet Specialist<br> <br> <br> <br> What does that mean for wireless?<br> <br> <br> <br> * The CCNA Wireless won’t be available anymore* There will be a Cisco Concentration certification in Wireless* Concentration exams exist under the Enterprise Track* 300-425 ENWLSD Enterprise Wireless Design* Focuses on site surveys* Collecting requirements and constraints* Predictive and post-deployment surveys* Determining infrastructure requirements such as * PoE* RRM* RF Profiles* RxSOP* Designing per requirements* High density* Mesh* Mobility* High availability* 300-430 ENWLSI Enterprise Wireless Implementation * Focuses on actual configuration* FlexConnect* QoS* Multicast* Location Services* MSE* CMX* Security* ISE* Portals (not security really)* 802.1X* AAA* Monitoring* DNAC* PI* Device Hardening* CCNP Enterprise contains two wireless concentration exams* 300-425 ENWLSD Designing Cisco Enterprise Wireless Networks* 300-430 ENWLSI Implementing Cisco Enterprise Wireless Networks* At the CCNP level, the R&amp;S and Wireless track have merged. So it will be the same core exam covering both tracks and it will be called CCNP Enterprise. It will test you on:* Dual Stack (IPv4 IPv6) architecture* Virtualization* Infrastructure* Network assurance* Security* Automation* CCIE Wireless becomes CCIE Enterprise Wireless* There is no more CCIE written, the CCNP ENCOR exam qualifies you to sit the CCIE Enterprise Wireless Lab* The policy to sit the lab 18 months after the written exam is gone. Now you have 3 years after you passed your ENCOR to sit in the lab.* The CCIE Enterprise Wireless Exam will cover (<a href="https://learningnetwork.cisco.com/community/certifications/ccie-enterprise-wireless/lab/exam-topics">link</a>):* Radio Frequency and Standards* Enterprise Wired Campus* Enterprise Wireless Network* Wireless Security and Identity Management* Wireless business applications and services* Automation, Analytics and Assurance<br> <br> <br> <br> New exams go live on February 24, 2020. Training for these new certifications will start this year (probably more towards the end of the year.)<br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> All certifications will now be valid for 3 years.