Pegasus Mail & Mercury

Welcome to the Community for Pegasus Mail and
The Mercury Mail Transport System, the Internet's longest-serving PC e-mail system!
Welcome to Pegasus Mail & Mercury Sign in | Join | Help
in
Home Blogs Forums Downloads Pegasus Mail Overview Mercury Overview

Seven layers of acronyms

Last post 09-18-2007, 0:20 by tgrantt. 10 replies.
Sort Posts: Previous Next
  •  06-14-2007, 14:10

    • Dirty Harry is not online. Last active: 01-04-2008, 22:03 Dirty Harry
    • Top 50 Contributor
    • Joined on 05-14-2007
    • Esperance, NY
    • Member
    • Points 830

    Seven layers of acronyms

    I will be taking the CompTIA network+ certification exam today.  I don't think I have ever seen a subject so saturated with acronyms as networking protocols and the OSI model.  I have spent hours of study just trying to drive those acronyms home and I must admit it is still mostly alphabet soup.  The old brain is just not the clap trap it used to be.

    I guess this is off topic..?

     


    Regards
    --Harry--
  •  06-14-2007, 20:06

    • PaulW is not online. Last active: 21 Nov 2008, 9:50 PaulW
    • Top 10 Contributor
    • Joined on 05-08-2007
    • UK
    • Contributor
    • Points 5,895

    Re: Seven layers of acronyms

    I know what you mean about acronyms. Smile 

    Good Luck!

     

  •  06-14-2007, 20:51

    Re: Seven layers of acronyms

    Dirty Harry:

    I will be taking the CompTIA network+ certification exam today.  I don't think I have ever seen a subject so saturated with acronyms as networking protocols and the OSI model.  I have spent hours of study just trying to drive those acronyms home and I must admit it is still mostly alphabet soup.  The old brain is just not the clap trap it used to be.

    I guess this is off topic..?

     

     
    Can you imagine though reading through a document that is trying to tell you how to use SMTP, IMAP4 or POP3 on a TCP/IP LAN without using acronyms?  It's mind boggling imagining reading an RFC that did not use acronyms for these, and many other, items.


    Thomas R. Stephenson
    San Jose, California
    Member of Pegasus Mail Support Team
  •  06-15-2007, 13:16

    • Dirty Harry is not online. Last active: 01-04-2008, 22:03 Dirty Harry
    • Top 50 Contributor
    • Joined on 05-14-2007
    • Esperance, NY
    • Member
    • Points 830

    Re: Seven layers of acronyms

    Thomas R. Stephenson:

    Can you imagine though reading through a document that is trying to tell you how to use SMTP, IMAP4 or POP3 on a TCP/IP LAN without using acronyms?  It's mind boggling imagining reading an RFC that did not use acronyms for these, and many other, items.

     Sure, the acronyms are definitely necessary.  If you have ever seen military messages you will know how much they love to use them.  However, after years of reading messages one becomes familiar with the acronyms at a reasonable pace.  If you are just breaking into networking you get hundreds of them thrown at you at once and it becomes alphabet soup very quickly.  I spent an extra two weeks just cramming acronyms for the test.

    That said, I wasted my time.  The test does not require that you memorize the acronyms.  Every question uses the acronyms but then states the entire word or phrase in perenthesis.  For instance:

    1. The OSI (Open System Interconnection Model) contains how many layers? 

    I was relieved that the test did this but was also quite angry that I wasted all that time banging away at acronyms.  None of the CompTIA practice tests revealed this little detail as they used only the acronym in the questions.  The time would have been much better spent studying protocols, standards, services, commandline switches, cable lengths, etc. etc.

     SIMUAP (Somehow I Messed Up And Passed) so I am now A+ and Network+ certified.  On to Security+.


    Regards
    --Harry--
  •  06-15-2007, 13:20

    • Dirty Harry is not online. Last active: 01-04-2008, 22:03 Dirty Harry
    • Top 50 Contributor
    • Joined on 05-14-2007
    • Esperance, NY
    • Member
    • Points 830

    Re: Seven layers of acronyms

    PaulW:

    Good Luck!

     Thanks, IPIOOMA.  (I pulled it out of my ***)


    Regards
    --Harry--
  •  06-15-2007, 14:36

    • PaulW is not online. Last active: 21 Nov 2008, 9:50 PaulW
    • Top 10 Contributor
    • Joined on 05-08-2007
    • UK
    • Contributor
    • Points 5,895

    Re: Seven layers of acronyms

    Congratulations!

  •  06-22-2007, 18:46

    • Slab is not online. Last active: 09-28-2007, 20:23 Slab
    • Top 50 Contributor
    • Joined on 05-08-2007
    • Member
    • Points 380

    Re: Seven layers of acronyms

    Now on to the CISSP, CISM, CISA, GSEC.  I remember those where like passing a kidney stone.
  •  09-13-2007, 15:49

    • NTxLS is not online. Last active: 21 Nov 2008, 2:24 NTxLS
    • Top 25 Contributor
    • Joined on 09-12-2007
    • LeonSprings, Texas USofA
    • Member
    • Points 745

    Re: Seven layers of acronyms

    Greetings from LeonSprings, Texas USofA, Congratulations, one point if I may? Nothing was wasted as what you have learned cannot be taken from you until you die, it will always be there. Calling it from the depths when you need it will be the main project, that is if you use it infrequently. Helpful solution, use it always and even paraned explanations will help us DUMMIES that do not know or cannot recall it from our depths. Can you imagine the number of people you could help by explaining in this way so we all will know what you are referencing in you messages? I know it gets to be a hassle and much typing, but; we all should learn as much as possible even though we are not fully certified as you have become. Again, CONGRATULATIONS,
    TIA, CU L8R,
    NTxLS
    Dell Inspiron AMD Athlon(tm) 64bit Dual Core Processor 2.3GHz, RAM 3G; 32bit Vista build 6001 SP1; IE v7.0; FF v3.0.4/wXtensions PM v1.7.2, NoScript v1.8.5; CFP v3.5.55810.432, AntiVir v8.0xxx
  •  09-14-2007, 18:36

    • Phil is not online. Last active: 11-21-2008, 13:36 Phil
    • Top 25 Contributor
    • Joined on 03-25-2007
    • Paris (France)
    • Member
    • Points 750
    • BetaTeam Moderator Translators

    Re: Seven layers of acronyms

    Here in France I'm always astonished by the so many acronyms that mean something (for example CeCoIA for CEntre de COntact de l'Informatique Académique which means Academical Computing Contact Center), seems to me that they spend much more time to find a name than to work on the new organisation, here also soldiers love acronyms...

    Regards 


    Philippe Chartier
    French translation team leader
  •  09-14-2007, 19:18

    Re: Seven layers of acronyms

    Phil:

    Here in France I'm always astonished by the so many acronyms that mean something (for example CeCoIA for CEntre de COntact de l'Informatique Académique which means Academical Computing Contact Center), seems to me that they spend much more time to find a name than to work on the new organisation, here also soldiers love acronyms...

    Regards 

     

    Acronyms are extremely efficient in written and verbal communications.  Can you see spelling that out or even saying that three or four times in  one page of text.  Try explaining SMTP, POP3 and IMAP4 using the full text each and every time.  ;-)  This gets a lot more difficult when talking about the lower level protocols without the ability to use acronyms.

     Military communications without acronyms would be even more difficult, specially in a multinational force.  ;-)


     

     


    Thomas R. Stephenson
    San Jose, California
    Member of Pegasus Mail Support Team
  •  09-18-2007, 0:20

    • tgrantt is not online. Last active: 09-18-2007, 0:31 tgrantt
    • Not Ranked
    • Joined on 08-21-2007
    • Member
    • Points 40

    Re: Seven layers of acronyms

    Dirty Harry, you need to join the AAAAA, the American Association Against Acronym Abuse.  Smile
View as RSS news feed in XML

Copyright © 2007 David Harris / Peter Strömblad. All Rights Reserved. | Terms of Use | Privacy Statement
Questions/Problems with community.pmail.com? | Visit our Hoster: PraktIT | Pegasus Mail Home Page