For the exams or for real work, this one satisfies both training goals.
- By Douglas King
- 01/01/2000
Don't want to fuss with Web page scripting? Use J-Bots instead.
- By Mike Gunderloy
- 01/01/2000
Consider it a study tool and IIS reference in one.
- By Jason Cattlett
- 01/01/2000
Proving you know how to create collaborative solutions with Outlook 2000 and Exchange Server 5.5 means understanding VB, ASP, COM, and CDO, among other technologies.
If you had a wish list for the WSH, it might look like XLNT 2.0.
- By Chris Brooke
- 11/01/1999
Proving you can create Office 2000 solutions for this exam requires thinking outside the product box.
- By Mike Gunderloy
- 11/01/1999
If you want to pass this one, make sure you know Microsoft DNA as if it were your own.
- By Patrick Santry
- 10/01/1999
Tackling the Site Server exam requires an understanding of IIS, Exchange, and SQL Server, too. How ready are you to call yourself a Web expert?
- By Blair Kovacs
- 10/01/1999
If you've successfully developed Visual C++ applications at some level, you're way ahead of the game with the Visual C++ Desktop exam.
- By Patricia Pickup
- 08/01/1999
Best preparation for the Visual C++ Distributed Apps exam: Get experience. Beyond that, here's how to get ready and what to expect.
There's no substitute for hands-on experience with SMS. Plan on spending lots of lab time to prepare.
- By Catherine Moya
- 07/01/1999
SQL Server 7.0 administration is a new animal compared to SQL 6.5, and so is the Admin exam. You'll find it broad, fair, and ready to go adaptive out of the box.
- By Keith D. Jablon
- 06/01/1999
While SQL 7.0 offers plenty that's easier to do than in SQL 6.5, you'd never know that from the Designing and Implementing exam.
New forms of questions test your hard-won experience in the field.
To pass the new Visual Basic 6.0 Desktop exam, you need to know standard VB objects (forms and controls) and the events they fire, ADO, and how to debug and deploy.
- By Chris Faranetta
- 03/01/1999
All you need to pass this exam is a thorough understanding of VB 5, VB 6,MTS, DNA, ADO, COM, DCOM, HTML, DHTML, IIS, XML, and OLEDB.
- By Chris Faranetta
- 01/01/1999
Although Microsoft wants to make programming easier, this exam proves that you should retain your fascination with the difficult.
- By Hasan Z. Rahim
- 12/01/1998
NT 4.0 Service Pack 4 contains so many changes, Microsoft should have called it “NT 4.1.”
- By Jeffrey Honeyman
- 12/01/1998
You’ll be relieved to hear that this exam builds on your knowledge of previous versions of Windows.
Some vendors suggest you can become an MCSE simply by working through their massive bundles of books, CDs, and practice exams. But can you? We'll tell you which products really pull their weight.
- By Steve Crandall
- 11/01/1998