When I read the "Unofficial" announcement of the new CCNP Wireless, I thought that this is just another area where Cisco, at the moment, is constantly at odds. I joke about it because there are so many classes I teach. In this case, use the "no" command against the "clear" command that you used last. In any case, looking at professional level certificates, you will notice CCNP, CCSP, CCVP, CCIP and probably (based on ads) the new CCNP Wireless network cisco voip certification.
Could this be inconsistent because of how close CCWP (I think it should be called) would be to close the acronym to neutral CWNP provider certification? I guess that's the point at this point, and we'll have to wait to see what the official announcement on CiscoLive brings. I still have my opinion on the sequence of compositions. CCENT is the beginning. Then CCNA. With CCNA you can go directly to CCNP, but to make CCSP, CCVP or soon become a Wireless Professional, you must specialize in CCNA, CCNA Security, Voice CCNA or CCNA Wireless.
I personally would like to see a certain sequence. Allow the CCNA routing and switching required before CCNP to be set. You can focus more on networking solutions, as it applies to Cisco solutions, as well as unified communications, mobility, and security. If you are unfamiliar, the following link shows the solution on the Cisco website.
Cisco Network Systems Solutions However, if you take a closer look, you'll find products that are detailed in the Network Systems solution, including routers, switches, network management and iOS software. All of this is important for a CCNP candidate because the track focuses on routers, switches, and IOS software functionality. Another key aspect of the associated specialization is that they not only cover Enterprise-class devices that would be ISR routers and local / fixed LAN switches for CCNP, but they also cover devices designed to deploy small branches.
With CCNA routing and switching, you can cover fast series switches as well as 500 series routers. All are designed as part of the Smart Business communications system. Again, these are my personal thoughts, but anyway I'm going with the tide. I think the Learning @ Cisco people are doing a great job of bringing the curriculum to market, as complete as it is. I look forward to the official announcement on CiscoLive
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