I can't remember much of the exam because I went on holidays immediately after writing. What I can tell you is that you do need to know everything others have stated on this site.

I had only one question on the OSI model itself (they gave me a display of it).

Learn: NDIS, ODI and how they work, and where they work.

Got 10 scenario questions (lucky me): both T1 questions (3 cities requiring 1 Mbps throughput; 1st with 2 lines, 2nd with 3). There were several questions about NetBIOS naming schemes, DNS, LMHOSTS, WINS, and DHCP, resolving addresses… Couple of questions dealing with NTFS with and without auditing, and C2 usage (tricky since C2 includes auditing as one of its features).

- Had the MAC address question (set NIC's to default MAC settings).

- Know all hardware (bridges, routers, brouters, gateways, switches, hubs, cabling etc.) and where they fit on the OSI model.

- Know the cable throughput speeds and their connector types as well as Cat. specifications.

- Know your protocols, when to use them and where they are found on the OSI model.

- Know your troubleshooting devices: Protocol Analyzer, TDR, Multimeter, Oscilloscope, Network Monitor, Cable Tester, and Performance Monitor. Know when and how they are used.

- Know WAN specifications and mediums: X.25, ATM, T1, Fiber Optic, Frame Relay, ISDN and when to use them.

- Understand the difference between connection-oriented and connectionless-oriented, and when they are used and by which protocols and at which OSI layer.

- Know router protocols: RIP, OSPF and when and how they are used.

- Know all fault tolerance features and RAID levels, and which ones Windows supports.

- Know your IRQ's and possible conflicts. Learn the IEEE 802 specifications and where they reside on the OSI model.

- Know your disaster planning for network failures.

- Know about transceiver types, frame types, loose cabling, IRQ conflicts, can ping an address but not use NetBIOS name, etc. problems.

- Had no questions on wireless.

Pay attention to the wording. It's true when they say that Microsoft is the master of ambiguity. Unfortunately they seem more interested in testing your grammar skills than your networking ones. Watch for things like "cost is a factor", or "low overhead requirements", or "no administrative concerns". There are too many to list, but read carefully. It will seem that you are getting repeat questions, but you're not. Take my advice, which is the advice of others on this site: do the scenario questions LAST. Mark them and come back to them when all of the others are completed. My exam started out with scenarios; I would have panicked if not for the advice of others that came before me. Also, give yourself PLENTY of time to arrive promptly at the testing center. I left an hour earlier than needed, to arrive on time, and I only made it 5 minutes before my starting time due to unexpected construction. Most of all, relax. If you do all that people on this site suggest and you know the material, you'll do fine. Good luck to all.