Tek-Tips is the largest IT community on the Internet today!

Members share and learn making Tek-Tips Forums the best source of peer-reviewed technical information on the Internet!

  • Congratulations strongm on being selected by the Tek-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

TestKing & Troytech Study Guides? 1

Status
Not open for further replies.

mcoxx

MIS
Feb 8, 2004
6
FJ
I am about to sit the 70-210 exam. How reliable and accurate are the TestKing & Troytech Study Guides? I've also studied the Transcender 70-210 exam, pretty tough but very good indepth info !

Thanks.
MCoxx.
 
Both of them are probably about 80% accurate. They can have some good information in them, but they are also very close to braindumps and thus some of the information is incorrect, if you decided to use one of those make sure that you research anything that sounds funny or diffrent from the transcenders by trying it out with some hands on work if possible.

CJ

Don't drink and post, save that for driving home!
 
braindumps don't really help as MS are adding new questions all the time... recommend avoiding them... waste of time and money...

JTB
Senior Microsoft Consultant
MCSE-NT4, MCP+I, MCP-W2K, CCNA, CCDA,
CTE, MCIWD, i-Net+, Network+
(MCSE-W2K in progress)
 
As part of my preparation I read through an old TestKing 70-210 and I was amazed at just how many of the questions were close or identical to the ones in the exam. As long as you understand your stuff and read the exam questions properly (sometimes the wording was a bit different which actually alterred the answer) then I'd recommend it. If all you do is buy TestKing's and don't study then I'd hope you'd fail ;)
 
As a fellow IT super hero jtb said, try not to rely on the braindumps...Get to know your stuff as when you are using this in the "real" world there are no braindumps that might save your sorry ass, when you come up with "real" problems.

Mind you Tek-tips might :)

Nzarth

MCSA/MCSE (W2K), CCA

Working on CCNA
 
Tek-tips has saved my cookies more than once...

JTB
Senior Microsoft Consultant
MCSE-NT4, MCP+I, MCP-W2K, CCNA, CCDA,
CTE, MCIWD, i-Net+, Network+
(MCSE-W2K in progress)
 
Really the best way is to work with the OS in question, in this case, Windows 2000 Pro. Cramming is useless with MCP exams. Get to know the system by going through every option page and read up on the theory in study guides. I used Sybex.

Jarrett
MCP (working on MCSE 2000)
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor

Back
Top