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MCSE : Security Specialist

GET CERTIFIED IN JUST 18 DAYS - 2003 PATH

Our 18 day accelerated MCSE 2003: Security+ Training BootCamp provides information technology professionals with the knowledge and skills necessary to install, configure, support, and troubleshoot Microsoft® Windows 2000- and 2003-based networks with a focus on information security in the enterprise. This is an accelerated course, designed for computer professionals that require effective, real-world skill-building and timely certification.

Now Available MCSE Certification Training

The MCSE 2003: Security+ Boot Camp delivers the greatest value on the market for Windows 2003 Certification Training. During the program, students will achieve the following certifications:

  • Microsoft Certified Professional (MCP)
  • Microsoft Certified Systems Administrator (MCSA)
  • CompTIA Security+
  • Microsoft Certified Systems Engineer (MCSE) 

Call About Onsite Courses at your location

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Microsoft MCSE MCSA Certification Training Boot Camp Class Course

The MCSE Boot Camp is unlike any other.  With our  class, you will learn more.

Our MCSE 2003: Security+ Accelerated Certification Program is the most effective, efficient way to learn how to successfully design, plan, and implement a network infrastructure, Active Directory® infrastructure, and client deployment on the Windows Server 2003 platform. 

Daily lectures, labs, and review sessions are supplemented by a combination of:

  • Proprietary Lab Manual & Microsoft Courseware - developed in conjunction with Microsoft, adapting Microsoft Official Curriculum to address the demands of accelerated learners
  • Authorized CompTIA Security+ Lab Manual & Courseware
  • Self Test™ or Transcender® Testing Software

Our MCSE 2003: Security+ Program:

  • Allows you to achieve your certifications in a fraction of the time of 'traditional training' while delivering industry-leading exam passing percentages
  • Helps students grasp complex technical concepts more easily by identifying and catering to individual student learning styles through a mixed visual, auditory and kinesthetic-tactual delivery system
  • Enhances retention by employing accelerated learning techniques focused on committing information to long-term memory

Contrary-wise, if your temperament tends toward the excitable, you may think dog food is about to undergo a dramatic, computer-based transformation. Like everything else in our civilization, we’ll find ways to:

• miniaturize it—genetically manipulated soy proteins allow one bowl to feed the whole pack;

• make it self-delivering—time-delayed bean nodules swell up in the dog’s digestive tract at predetermined intervals, bypassing tongue and teeth;

• smarten it up—intelligent nanobots embedded in the beans will report on the dog’s internal health (“Rex is exhibiting enzyme scores consistent with cheese deficiency”).

But guess what? Languid or excitable, you’re wrong. In the distant past, dogs did not have 40-pound bags of baked soy kibble. They were resourceful omnivores, scarfing up whatever nature provided them—game, carrion, a little grass, a little grain. They were even equipped to endure long periods with no food at all. Fasting, necessitated by unavailability, drilled discipline and patience into the species.

But my most important data comes from the present. You see, my dog can’t stand kibble. When he was a puppy I managed to cram a few chunks down his gullet. But he is hip to that action now. Fool me once, shame on you, is his attitude.

The kibble I described has been in his bowl for almost eight months. Look closely and you can see tiny spider webs interlacing the dusty chunks. The only reason I haven’t thrown it out is because a battle of wills is under way. We both think we are winning.

Meanwhile, Beau is fit and trim from a nutritional regimen he devises for himself, made entirely of food he steals from the rest of the family. A Froot Loop here, a lamb shank there—it all adds up, and provides Beau with a rich, balanced, diverse diet. How fit is he? The dog has ribs, but damned if I can see any of them. So based on this experience, I predict that future dogs will be empowered to make their own food choices, based on what everyone else is having.

A broader question is, what happens once we start empowering dogs? The fabric of society begins to pull apart, as if fought over by a pair of wrangling schnauzers. If they can order for themselves off the adult menu, what else will follow? Will they choose food that is good for them, like kibble? Or will they succumb to the dark side of their natures, gorging on heavy cream and Braunschweiger?

These are issues a futurist can cut his teeth on. And your dog won’t live long enough to prove me wrong.

 

 


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