Re: 70-290: Sims vs. Multiple Choice



"B.D." <MCNGP #51> wrote in message news:83B48005-8505-4447-A65D-1F197DCA9152@xxxxxxxxxxxxx:

Boneheads like you crack me up. You asshats sit behind your 19" monitors, jump
into a newsgroup, and ask lame questions, knowing damb good and well that you're
going to get a lame answer. Then, when you get it (and not the answer you REALLY
wanted), you get belligerent and try to make yourself out to be the bad-ass that
people should cross the street to avoid. Newsflash, flash...you're nothing more
than a font to anyone here.

You're just like all the other self centered egotistical ***-sticks that walks
in here on a weekly basis doing the same damb thing. Every single one of you has
to make a point of degrading the person by claiming they live in their parent's
basement. Do you really believe that every techie on the internet lives in their
parent's basement, or are you really that effing stupid??

Take a walk Mr MCP!! Let the MCSAs, MCSEs, and MCTs help the people that are
asking legitimate questions. You can come back when you can grow up enough to
lose the attitude.

Buh-BYE!!!

--
BD [x51]



"Mishawaka MCP" <MishawakaMCP@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:6A86C5AF-0AF6-4C49-9089-EDB4EEFC756D@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> First and foremost, the word is 'drivel', you effing moron. You dribble a
> basketball. Drivel is what comes out of the space where your brain should
> be. I see now why people resort to braindumps, rather than deal with idiots
> like yourself.
>
> Second, you can't really be this stupid, can you? There's an obvious
> break-even point when it comes to studying. Time is valuable to most people
> (other than the two absolute idiots who have posted in this thread, yourself
> and catwalker). I see now why you still live in your parents' basement.
> Ambition and social skills are a good thing. You should look into them.
>
> I'm all for being inquisitive, just try harder to be less of a douchebag.
> Please don't waste anyone else's time by replying. You've wasted enough of
> my time already.
>
>
>
> "John R" wrote:
>
>>
>> "Mishawaka MCP" <MishawakaMCP@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
>> news:E7D5C2A8-F76A-4FD3-B17E-DD8348146CAE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> > In the future, don't waste my time by responding to posts with worthless,
>> > condescending drivel. I am well aware that no two exams are the same.
>> > Hence, I asked what people's experiences were, knowing there would be a
>> > variety of answers.
>> >
>> > "catwalker63" wrote:
>> >
>> >> =?Utf-8?B?TWlzaGF3YWthIE1DUA==?= <Mishawaka
>> >> MCP@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> prattled ceaselessly in
>> >> news:412D1969-00BF-4F06-BA73-27D7D7DBF6D3@xxxxxxxxxxxxx:
>> >>
>> >> > What have people's experiences been with the number of Sims versus the
>> >> > number of Multiple Choice questions for 70-290?
>> >> >
>> >> > An even number of sims and multiple choice questions, only a few sims,
>> >> > what?
>> >>
>> >> I regret to inform you that other's experience of the mix of sims and mc
>> >> questions will not have anything to do with your experience when you go.
>> >> 'Cause you won't get the same exam as somebody else so their experience
>> >> has
>> >> no meaning for you.
>> >>
>> >> --
>> >> Catwalker
>> >> MCNGP #43
>> >> www.mcngp.com
>> >> "Definitely not wearing any underwear."
>> >>
>>
>> So, how does knowing the number of questions, the type of questions, etc
>> help prepare you for the exam? Are you saying that if there are more sim
>> questions then you will study moving your mouse, but if there are more
>> multiple choice questions, they you will study answering "A", "B", or "C".
>>
>> I'm not being critical, I am just asking how that can possibly help prepare
>> you for the exam. I mean, you already expect that there will be a variety
>> of testing methods, that is a given based on your question. Unless you are
>> going to do some statistical analysis, "lets see, he saw 4 sims, he saw 7
>> sims, he saw 7 sims, so that is 18 divided by 3, I can expect 6 sims". But
>> even if you were, by your own reply here you already know that it will vary
>> and therefore the result of that analysis is by your own definition
>> "meaningless dribble". Ok, maybe you were just wanting to get an idea. Ok,
>> let's say there will be 6-9 sims on your test. How does that help you
>> prepare?
>>
>> I really am fascinated with the questions that people ask about the exams.
>> To me, you either know the material or you don't, and the test will bare
>> that out. If you are more concerned with these types of issues, it seems to
>> me that you are wasting your time on stuff that is unimportant, and that
>> time could be better spent asking questions like "Was there a lot about
>> DNS?" or "Do they get into WINS replication on the test".
>>
>> But, let's say that maybe you are the kind of person that might say "I don't
>> do well on multiple choice, but I can find my way around windows easily
>> enough". Even knowing that is not going to change your test experience, so
>> once again, even that bit of information is "meaningless dribble".
>>
>> And finally, if all of my arguments are correct (I thought I was wrong once,
>> but I was mistaken), would this entire thread not be considered "meaningless
>> dribble"?
>>
>> Again, I am not being critical, I am being inquisitive.
>>
>> John R
>>
>>
>>

Pwned *grin*

I see the alter ego is back BD?

B *don't make him angry. You won't like him when he's angry* D

--
Michael D. Alligood, MCITP, MCTS, MCSA, MCDST
The I.T. Classroom - http://www.theitclassroom.com/
CertGuard, Inc. - http://www.certguard.com/
Microsoft Exam Security Newsgroup - microsoft.public.certification.exam.security


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