Used price: $17.95
List price: $149.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $104.22
Buy one from zShops for: $95.00
The same goes for the included test software with study mode and test exam. There are many questions for which you should select more then one answer, but they set the answers to only one selectable. Or in one case at least the question had two possible answer choices, but none was marked as the right answer.
I sent several times feedback to Cisco Press and checked their website if they have maybe an update for the books or software, but nothing so far. Nor has any of my feedbacks being answered.
All in all the books did help me to prepare myself for the tests and pass all successfull on the first try, but I credit much to my general knowledge about networking and parallel reading other documentation...
September 2002: Cisco changes CCNP Routing Exam
On September 13, Cisco Systems introduced a new version to its professional level Routing exam, known as Building Scalable Cisco Internetworks (BSCI). BSCI has an additional section on the IS-IS protocol not previously covered in the BSCN course or exam. This exam, already in existence as part of the CCIP certification program, replaces Building Scalable Cisco Networks (BSCN), one of the four exams required for both the CCNP and CCDP certifications.
Free Chapters from Cisco Press!
Cisco Press published two titles originally created for BSCN preparation, Building Scalable Cisco Networks and CCNP Routing Exam Certification Guide. These titles are still excellent self-study tools in your overall preparation strategy for pursuit of CCNP or CCDP certifications. To assist candidates, Cisco Press is providing supplemental chapters on IS-IS. The BSCN and Routing Exam Certification Guide supplemental material can be downloaded by clicking the links below.
Used price: $45.00
Buy one from zShops for: $44.00
This book was very useful to me in my research. My research is in the area of data compression and its applications to communication networks. The title of my dissertation is Data Compression Techniques in Modern Communication Networks.
C.S. Rani, Ph.D.
Used price: $7.49
Buy one from zShops for: $7.50
Used price: $42.35
"During the Persian Gulf War, George Bush sought to evoke a "new world order". The president was right in seeing a new potential for the international management of interstate and intrastate conflicts, but he was wrong in his horizons. Rather than a single world order, we are witnessing today the emergence of a variety of new regional orders." (Emphasis in original) This is the opening sentence of a book appropriately titled Regional Orders: Building Security in a New World.
Equally appropriately, it is based on a futuristic assumption: "In the foreseeable future, violent conflicts will mostly arise out of regional concerns and will be viewed by political actors through a regional rather than a global lens." We are either still on the way towards evolving regional arrangements and actions to cope with conflicts; or the entire project has been an unattainable ideal from the beginning. The book reflects innovative mode and optimistic mood in the discipline of International Relations in the early nineties. That is its contribution and that is its weakness.
In fact, one of the contributors attempts to draw parallels between the Concert of Europe and the Arab-Israel situation in West Asia and concludes on the note of optimism tempered with caution. (David J. Pervin, "Building Order in Arab-Israeli Relations: From Balance to Concert?" pp. 271-296) Susan Shirk, in her paper on "Asia-Pacific Regional Security: Balance of Power or Concert of Powers? (pp.245-270) argues that since successful management of relations between powers in the Asia-Pacific would be difficult to achieve by power-balancing alone, a regional concert of powers could emerge involving the US, Russia, China and Japan. "...there remain two possible obstacles ...a lack of ideological consensus and uncertain acceptance of the status quo," she concedes. No minor irritants, these!
Edmond J. Keller, on the other hand, is less upbeat. He identifies progress toward democracy and self-sustained development as the priority goals in Africa and will be content to see the development of interlocking collective security management systems linking the Organisation of African Unity with subregional organisations having common collective security interests. ("Rethinking African Regional Security" pp.296-317) Yuen Foong Khong is even less sanguine regarding Southeast Asia in the New World. As ASEAN moves toward expanding its membership and reaches out to nest itself in larger multilateral organisations such as the ARF and APEC, "it is conceivable that the spirit of togetherness engendered by ASEAN's cooperative ventures in the previous decades may come under strain." ("ASEAN and the Southeast Asian Security Complex" pp.318-339).
After the end of the Cold War, political analysts and policy makers alike turned their attention to the regional conflicts. Against the background of improving relations between the US and Russia, the conflicts in the margins of the global system, i.e., South Asia, West Asia, Africa, the new states in Central Asia etc., were seen as the fresh and more dangerous threats - to the states, to the regions and to the world. The political analyses broke new grounds at times. At others, old tools were employed to understand and explain new realities.
David A. Lake divides regions into three neat categories: unipolar, bipolar and multipolar and goes on to apply the Neorealist maxims to explain the regional dynamics. For example, he says, the unipolar regional security systems will be relatively autonomous, according to the theory of hegemonic stability; the multipolar ones will also be autonomous but plagued by problems of conflict management; and the bipolar ones will be less cooperative and less autonomous. (pp.60-61). There are several problems with such formulations. One, the Neorealism does not provide a comprehensive framework for understanding international relations. Two, the regional systems are inherently open. The global system, other regional systems, and even "outside" states can have a major impact on a region. (PP. 9-10). Autonomous regions, in the circumstances, can only be less penetrated vis-à-vis the highly penetrated ones. Three, as Hurrel puts it, "...all regions are socially constructed and hence politically contested." A state can be a member of two regions simultaneously; at times, three. Or a state can choose to look east, west, north or south according to its needs at various points in time. Or a region can choose to deny a state its membership in the region.
To sum up, even if one rejects the contention that 'in marked contrast to the Cold War era, we do not see global political considerations leading to the consistent imposition of global issues, institutions or orders on all regional security complexes," (p.347) the book is a welcome input to the burgeoning literature on regions in a comparative perspective.
Gulshan Dietl, Professor, School of International Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi - 110067.
Used price: $0.95
Collectible price: $8.61
Buy one from zShops for: $1.50
Used price: $1.97
Buy one from zShops for: $7.99
What I got instead was a 250-page essay on the history of the (Canadian) legal system and the field of computer science...
Clearly intended as a college textbook, this book is profoundly misleading in its subtitle, "What You Need to Know About Doing Business Online."
I would avoid it.
Although I've not finished the book, this book at first read seems much too valuable to put down!
regards,
Nel,
Program Manager
E*commerce Division
Singapore Telecoms Ltd
Used price: $6.50