Sunday, March 30, 2008

My Top 5 Signature Themes

My Top 5 Signature Themes

Actually I have been nominated by my manager to attend a 1 day course on finding my strengths.
The part of the preparation for this course means that i have to read through atleast the first three chapters of their book " NOW , Discover your Strengths" by Marcus Buckingham & Donald O. Clifton, Ph.D. Then I am supposed to take an online survey at www.strengthsfinder.com which spit out the following results:-

So my question to you all who know me so far: 1) Do you agree to what this survey says as my top 5 Strengths are?


They are listed below:
--Deliberative
--Significance
--Harmony
--Competition
--Consistency

Pls leave your comments on the blog.

######Results from the Survey ##########
Your Signature Themes

Many years of research conducted by The Gallup Organization suggest that the most effective people are those who understand their strengths and behaviors
Your Signature Themes

Dharmesh Shah

Your Signature Themes

Many years of research conducted by The Gallup Organization suggest that the most effective people are those who understand their strengths and behaviors. These people are best able to develop strategies to meet and exceed the demands of their daily lives, their careers, and their families.

A review of the knowledge and skills you have acquired can provide a basic sense of your abilities, but an awareness and understanding of your natural talents will provide true insight into the core reasons behind your consistent successes.

Your Signature Themes report presents your five most dominant themes of talent, in the rank order revealed by your responses to StrengthsFinder. Of the 34 themes measured, these are your "top five."

Your Signature Themes are very important in maximizing the talents that lead to your successes. By focusing on your Signature Themes, separately and in combination, you can identify your talents, build them into strengths, and enjoy personal and career success through consistent, near-perfect performance.

Deliberative
You are careful. You are vigilant. You are a private person. You know that the world is an unpredictable place. Everything may seem in order, but beneath the surface you sense the many risks. Rather than denying these risks, you draw each one out into the open. Then each risk can be identified, assessed, and ultimately reduced. Thus, you are a fairly serious person who approaches life with a certain reserve. For example, you like to plan ahead so as to anticipate what might go wrong. You select your friends cautiously and keep your own counsel when the conversation turns to personal matters. You are careful not to give too much praise and recognition, lest it be misconstrued. If some people don’t like you because you are not as effusive as others, then so be it. For you, life is not a popularity contest. Life is something of a minefield. Others can run through it recklessly if they so choose, but you take a different approach. You identify the dangers, weigh their relative impact, and then place your feet deliberately. You walk with care.
Significance
You want to be very significant in the eyes of other people. In the truest sense of the word you want to be recognized. You want to be heard. You want to stand out. You want to be known. In particular, you want to be known and appreciated for the unique strengths you bring. You feel a need to be admired as credible, professional, and successful. Likewise, you want to associate with others who are credible, professional, and successful. And if they aren’t, you will push them to achieve until they are. Or you will move on. An independent spirit, you want your work to be a way of life rather than a job, and in that work you want to be given free rein, the leeway to do things your way. Your yearnings feel intense to you, and you honor those yearnings. And so your life is filled with goals, achievements, or qualifications that you crave. Whatever your focus—and each person is distinct—your Significance theme will keep pulling you upward, away from the mediocre toward the exceptional. It is the theme that keeps you reaching.
Harmony
You look for areas of agreement. In your view there is little to be gained from conflict and friction, so you seek to hold them to a minimum. When you know that the people around you hold differing views, you try to find the common ground. You try to steer them away from confrontation and toward harmony. In fact, harmony is one of your guiding values. You can’t quite believe how much time is wasted by people trying to impose their views on others. Wouldn’t we all be more productive if we kept our opinions in check and instead looked for consensus and support? You believe we would, and you live by that belief. When others are sounding off about their goals, their claims, and their fervently held opinions, you hold your peace. When others strike out in a direction, you will willingly, in the service of harmony, modify your own objectives to merge with theirs (as long as their basic values do not clash with yours). When others start to argue about their pet theory or concept, you steer clear of the debate, preferring to talk about practical, down-to-earth matters on which you can all agree. In your view we are all in the same boat, and we need this boat to get where we are going. It is a good boat. There is no need to rock it just to show that you can.
Competition
Competition is rooted in comparison. When you look at the world, you are instinctively aware of other people’s performance. Their performance is the ultimate yardstick. No matter how hard you tried, no matter how worthy your intentions, if you reached your goal but did not outperform your peers, the achievement feels hollow. Like all competitors, you need other people. You need to compare. If you can compare, you can compete, and if you can compete, you can win. And when you win, there is no feeling quite like it. You like measurement because it facilitates comparisons. You like other competitors because they invigorate you. You like contests because they must produce a winner. You particularly like contests where you know you have the inside track to be the winner. Although you are gracious to your fellow competitors and even stoic in defeat, you don’t compete for the fun of competing. You compete to win. Over time you will come to avoid contests where winning seems unlikely.
Consistency
Balance is important to you. You are keenly aware of the need to treat people the same, no matter what their station in life, so you do not want to see the scales tipped too far in any one person’s favor. In your view this leads to selfishness and individualism. It leads to a world where some people gain an unfair advantage because of their connections or their background or their greasing of the wheels. This is truly offensive to you. You see yourself as a guardian against it. In direct contrast to this world of special favors, you believe that people function best in a consistent environment where the rules are clear and are applied to everyone equally. This is an environment where people know what is expected. It is predictable and evenhanded. It is fair. Here each person has an even chance to show his or her worth.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

CoD: Frame Relay

1) Multipoint Interfaces
Assign MAP statements automatically assigns Circuit (DLCI) to the interface.
So frame-relay map ... config applied ==> No need to do frame-relay interface-dlci .....

2) Layer 3 to Layer 2 Resoultion is only Locally Significatnt.
==> You can use IARP at one end and frame-relay map at other and viceversa

3) sh frame-relay map cmd o/p on Point-to-point interface
When the configuration is verified with the show frame-relay map command, a unicast
layer 3 address is not associated with the DLCI. Instead, the output point-to-point dlci
indicates that any traffic transiting the subinterface will use the DLCI specified on the
interface. In addition to this, broadcast support is automatically enabled on point-to-point
NBMA circuits. This can be seen by the output of the show frame-relay map command,
as the broadcast keyword is associated with the mapping.

4) Not only is layer 3 to layer 2 resolution only locally significant, the type of interface,
whether a main interface, multipoint subinterface, or point-to-point subinterface, is also
only locally significant.

5) no frame-relay inverse-arp ip 405 ==> to remove Mappings for Unused DLCI

6) V V IMP: Minimise Redundant Broadcast Between Hub-Spoke

--Note that on R4 and R5, multiple mapping statements resolve to the same layer 2
address. This is due to the fact that in order for traffic to pass between R4 and R5, it
must first transit R1. Also, note that the broadcast keyword on the end of their frame relay map statements is only used on one mapping. This prevents the spokes from
duplicating the same broadcast or multicast packet that is sent to the interface out the
same circuit.

--Note that the mapping that the broadcast keyword is associated with is
arbitrary, and could be moved to the mapping for R4 and R5's addresses respectively.
This is due to the fact that the broadcast resolution does not relate to the unicast
address, but instead only relates to the layer 2 circuit address.

Saturday, March 22, 2008

I don't want to pass !

I remember a good friend of mine telling this to us when he organized a small session on the most coveted CCIE some 6months ago
" I Don't Want to PASS ! "

Well his opinion was that when you are too much focussed on the final result, i.e get your CCIE, you take too much stress and start to falter.
He felt that if you take this Exam as just another day to work, You possibly have better chances of passing.

But if you are hell-banked on passing. Chances are that you will NOT.

His opinion was that I don't want to pass at the same time I want to ensure that I fail with the least margin. I don't want to be under prepared.

He said all is possible if you let go the notion of PASSING.
He said that What would happen if we FAIL ?
1) Lose out on Rs 2,50,000 INR (Indian Rupees) in Lab fees, Travel, Hotelling, VISA Study Material!

But indeed, If you look at it from his Point Of View:-
1) That it is
2) You still will have the learning from the training that you could use for Life
3) With Failure, I am not going to lose my Job/Life
4)Its not War, that I am going to lose a limb, I will always have a second chance, and a third.....
5) Failure in CCIE is not a Taboo. More people fail than pass.


So as I begin my journey to CCIE......... "I Don't want to Pass"

Thanks Anand D.

The Strategy !

#########What I will miss##############
1) 2nd Anniversary
2) Play Time with the new born kid ! He will be 7 months Old when I attempt the lab !
3) Socialsing with family .
4) > 8 hours of sleep / day


##########What I will need to do#############
1) Get over my procrastination
2) Read a lot
3) Practise a lot
4) Compensate my time spent in Travel to Siddhivinayak every Tuesdays ??
5) Eat a lot of low fat and low spiced food, Get over Acidity !


SO i will have how many days to do it ? ( Considering this from 24March08)
8 x march08
30x april08
31xmay08
30xjune08
17xjuly08
_________
116 days



#########How Will I do it ?#####################

Now assuming I will put in roughly 5 hours a days until End of May08
==> 69 days x 5 hours = 345hours
==> Will need to be able to finish
1) IEWB CoD
2) Know how to navigate Doc CD
3) IEWB Advanced Technologies Lab

Now assuming I will put in 12 hours a day from June08 till 17th July 08
===> 47 days x 12 hours = 564 hours
===> Will need to be able to finish
1) 10 labs from IEWB VOl2 Workbook / OR / 10 Labs from IEWB Vol 1 Workbook
2) 10 labs from IEWB Vol3 Core Workbook
3) Narbik's Soup to Nuts CCBootcamp Vol1 to Vol3

############Where will i do it ? #######################
1) In my own house and at Work on my laptop running dynamips

###### What Will I get ? ##########################
1) CCIE (Probably)
2) Got over my Procrastination
3) Proved myself that I am still good for the hard stuff
4) Learnt a lot more than I would have ever imagined !
5) Live my dream !