The CompTIA Network+ certification is the sign of a competent networking professional It is an international, vendor-independent certification that a technician demonstrates competency in the administration, maintenance, troubleshooting, installation and configuration of basic network infrastructure.
Since its introduction in 1999, more than 235,000 people in CompTIA Network + certified. Microsoft disclaims recognize CompTIA Network + into their Microsoft Certified Systems Administrator (MCSA) program and other companies such as Novell, Cisco and HP too, CompTIA Network + as part of their certification tracks.
Although not a requirement, it is recommended that CompTIA Network + candidates have at least nine months experience in network support or administration or academic training, along with a CompTIA A + certification.
For IT professionals require re-certification:
The latest version of the CompTIA Network + certification exam was launched in early 2009 to life. IT professionals who have encouraged or required by their employers to stay current on their certifications, you have two options: You can participate in the new version of the test, or they can take the CompTIA Network + bridge investigation, involving the new targets. The test, test code BR0-002, is a 60-minute, 50-question test. A passing score of 500 on a scale of 100-900.
Only professionals who are currently CompTIA Network + certified under the Goals 2005, in consideration CompTIA Network + 2009 certification audit under the bridge.
"I always look for CompTIA Network + at a job applicant's resume because it tells me that they are motivated to learn, and it shows that they have the ambition and drive to prove their knowledge."
Number of questions: 100
Length of test: 90 minutes
Passing score: 720 on a scale of 100-900
Recommended experience: CompTIA A+ certification and nine months networking experience
Languages: English, Spanish, German
Exam codes: N10-004 and JK0-016
Until March 2010, the previous Network+ exam, with exam codes N10-003 and JK0-012, will be available in Japanese, Chinese, German, Korean and Greek. However, applicants are encouraged to take the most recent version of the exam when possible.
Since its introduction in 1999, more than 235,000 people in CompTIA Network + certified. Microsoft disclaims recognize CompTIA Network + into their Microsoft Certified Systems Administrator (MCSA) program and other companies such as Novell, Cisco and HP too, CompTIA Network + as part of their certification tracks.
Although not a requirement, it is recommended that CompTIA Network + candidates have at least nine months experience in network support or administration or academic training, along with a CompTIA A + certification.
For IT professionals require re-certification:
The latest version of the CompTIA Network + certification exam was launched in early 2009 to life. IT professionals who have encouraged or required by their employers to stay current on their certifications, you have two options: You can participate in the new version of the test, or they can take the CompTIA Network + bridge investigation, involving the new targets. The test, test code BR0-002, is a 60-minute, 50-question test. A passing score of 500 on a scale of 100-900.
Only professionals who are currently CompTIA Network + certified under the Goals 2005, in consideration CompTIA Network + 2009 certification audit under the bridge.
"I always look for CompTIA Network + at a job applicant's resume because it tells me that they are motivated to learn, and it shows that they have the ambition and drive to prove their knowledge."
Length of test: 90 minutes
Passing score: 720 on a scale of 100-900
Recommended experience: CompTIA A+ certification and nine months networking experience
Languages: English, Spanish, German
Exam codes: N10-004 and JK0-016
Until March 2010, the previous Network+ exam, with exam codes N10-003 and JK0-012, will be available in Japanese, Chinese, German, Korean and Greek. However, applicants are encouraged to take the most recent version of the exam when possible.
No comments:
Post a Comment