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M w ate w ri M w. a at AT l• A e TI D IM ria co o l• at ur No er D w se t D ia w o w. N s. u l• co pl o D AT t m ica o D I co up N te ot ur lic w D se...
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M w ate w ri M w. a at AT l• A e TI D IM ria co o l• at ur No er D w se t D ia w o w. N s. u l• co pl o D AT t m ica o D I co up N te ot ur lic w D se at w u s. e • AT w. pli co A IM AT ca m TI t e I at co • M er at ur AT i a er w s I l e w • ia s. Ma w. D l c t o o er AT N m ia AT Ic ot l• ou D IM D r u s o at es pli N e w ri c . ot co at w al w. • D m e• up AT Do AT lic Ic N I at M ou ot e at rs D er es up ia .c lic l om a te Professional Development Short Course On: Implementing IPv6 Networks Instructor:

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Mark A. Miller, P.E.

ATI Course Schedule:

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ATI's Implementing IPv6 Networks:

http://www.ATIcourses.com/schedule.htm http://www.aticourses.com/implementing_TCP_IPv6.htm

Copyright 2004 All Rights Reserved

349 Berkshire Drive • Riva, Maryland 21140 888-501-2100 • 410-956-8805 Website: www.ATIcourses.com • Email: [email protected]

Implementing TCP/IP and IPv6 Networks Migrating Your Internetwork to the Next Generation Internet Protocol

May 20-21, 2008 Beltsville, Maryland $990 (8:30am - 4:00pm)

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The growth of the Internet has taxed the capabilities of the current Internet Protocol, IP version 4, requiring enhancements for real-time application support, security, and addressing, that are some of the key enhancements found in IPv6.

Course Outline 1. Using TCP/IP and the Internet. Origin and development of the protocols. The ARPA architecture, and its relationship to the OSI Reference Model. Internet growth and future developments. 2. Supporting TCP/IP and the Internet Protocols. The ARPA core protocols. The ARPA address resolution, control and routing protocols. Implementation support within IBM SNA, Windows, Macintosh, and LAN networking environments. 3. The Network Interface Connection. Functions of the LAN, MAN and WAN network interfaces. Enabling protocols including Ethernet, FDDI, ISDN, ATM, and Frame Relay. Dialup support using PPP and SLIP. 4. The Internetwork Connection. Functions of the Internet Layer. Routing and packet processing algorithms. Functions of the IP header fields. Addressing and subnetwork addressing architectures. Protocols implemented to support the internetwork connection: ARP, RARP, ICMP, BOOTP, RIP, OSPF, EGP, BGP and DNS. Case studies: remote host login sequence, and message fragmentation. 5. The Host-to-Host Connection. Functions of the Host-to-Host Layer. Port addresses. Function and operation of the User Datagram Protocol (UDP). Functions and operation of the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP). Case study: establishing and terminating TCP connections. 6. The Process/Application Connection. Functions of the Process/Application Layer. Functions and operation of the commonly-used applications: TFTP, FTP, TELNET, SMTP, HTTP and NetBIOS. 7. Managing the Internet. The specific management functional areas. Agent/manager model. Structure of Management Information (SMI). Management Information Bases (MIBs). The Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP), versions 1, 2 and 3, architecture and message formats. 8. The Need for a New Internet Protocol. The explosive growth of the Internet. Shortcomings of IP version 4. Technical criteria for IP Next Generation (IPng). The final result: IP Version 6. The 6Bone network. 9. The IPv6 Specification. IPv6 changes. IPv6 terminology. The IPv6 header format. Comparing IPv6 with IPv4. Next Header Field Operation. IPv6 packet format. Optional extension headers. Packet size issues. Case Study 1: IPv6 transport over an IPv4 network infrastructure. 10. IPv6 Addressing Architecture. The Benchmark - IPv4 Addresses. Classless Interdomain Routing (CIDR). Address options: Unicast, Anycast and Multicast. IPv6 addressing architecture. Unicast addresses: subnet, IEEE 802, hierarchical, provider-based. Transition addresses: IPv4 to/from IPv6. Anycast addresses. Multicast addresses. Case Study 2: addressing operations through an IPv6 network. 11. Intranetwork Communications. The Benchmark - ICMP for IPv4. ICMPv6 functions. ICMPv6 message formats. Multicast Listener messages. Neighbor Discovery messages. Path MTU discovery process. Neighbor Unreachability state diagram. Case Study 3: Router Advertisement Messages. 12. Autoconfiguration and Local Network Issues. Address autoconfiguration. DHCPv6. IPv6 over local and wide area networks: Ethernet, Token Ring, FDDI, PPP, ATM and Frame Relay. Case Study 4: Neighbor Solicitation/Neighbor Advertisement processes. 13. Routing Issues. IPv6 support for RIPng, OSPF and BGP. Case Study 5: RIP operation within IPv6 networks. 14. Host Issues. Upper layer checksums. Maximum packet lifetimes. Maximum payload size. Domain Name System (DNS) upgrades. Berkeley UNIX API enhancements. IPv6 security mechanisms. Authentication header format and operation. Encryption header format and operation. 15. Network Management Issues. The Agent/Manager paradigm. Structure of Management Information. Management Information Base. IPv6 MIB groups. SNMPv1, v2 and v3 protocol data unit formats. 16. Transition Strategies - moving from IPv4 to IPv6. The transition process. Dual IP stack architectures and operation. Packet encapsulation/decapsulation formats. Configured tunneling. Automatic tunneling: host-to-host and router-to-host scenarios. Routing scenarios between IPv4 and IPv6 areas. Implementation roadmap. 17. Vendor solutions and implementation plans. IPv6 specifications, vendor implementations, and resources.

What You Will Learn

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• The architecture of the Internet, and how IP-connected networks interface to that architecture. • Understand the formats of TCP, IP, UDP and others. • Study the functions of the supporting protocols, such as ARP, RARP, DNS, BOOTP, RIP and OSPF. • Discover how applications such as FTP, TELNET, SMTP and HTTP are integrated into a TCP/IP environment. • Study the various TCP processes, including connections, sequence control, and flow control. • Understand the operation of SNMP, the Internet standard for network management. • Understand the limitations of the current IPv4. • Key features of IPv6: larger addresses and security. • Analyze the formats of the IPv6 packet header, extension headers, and other constructs. • Gain insights into how the IPv6 transition will affect other functions at the routers and hosts. • Explore the affects of IPv6 on other elements of your internet or intranet architecture. • Learn leading vendors such as Cisco Systems, Sun, IBM, Microsoft and others are implementing IPv6. • See how the implementation of IPv6 will allow expansion of the global Internet to continue. • Learn how to strategically plan your transition to IPv6. • Public domain sources of further information on IPv6.

Instructor

Mark A. Miller, P.E., has been directly involved with data communication systems and computer networks since 1976. Prior to founding DigiNet® Corporation, he held a number of engineering and management positions within Southwestern Bell; Bell Telephone Laboratories; and AT&T. Mark has lectured extensively on data communication; internetwork design and management; and troubleshooting and analyzing complex internetworks; and has taught at Comdex, Comnet, Networld+Interop, Next Generation Networks, and many other conferences. He is the author of 20 textbooks on internetwork design, analysis and management, published by John Wiley & Sons and McGraw-Hill. Mark holds both BS and MS degrees in Electrical Engineering, and is a Registered Professional Engineer in Colorado, Arizona, Wyoming and Kansas.

Register online at www.ATIcourses.com or call ATI at 888.501.2100 or 410.956.8805

Vol. 92 – 35

M w ate w ri M w. a at AT l• A e TI D IM ria co o l• at ur No er D w se t D ia w o w. N s. u l• co pl o D AT t m ica o D I co up N te ot ur lic w D se at w u s. e • AT w. pli co A IM AT ca m TI t e I at co • M er at ur AT i a er w s I l e w • ia s. Ma w. D l c t o o er AT N m ia AT Ic ot l• ou D IM D r u s o at es pli N e w ri c . ot co at w al w. • D m e• up AT Do AT lic Ic N I at M ou ot e at rs D er es up ia .c lic l om a te

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Boost Your Skills with On-Site Courses Tailored to Your Needs

349 Berkshire Drive Riva, Maryland 21140 Telephone 1-888-501-2100 / (410) 965-8805 Fax (410) 956-5785 Email: [email protected]

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The Applied Technology Institute specializes in training programs for technical professionals. Our courses keep you current in the state-of-the-art technology that is essential to keep your company on the cutting edge in today’s highly competitive marketplace. Since 1984, ATI has earned the trust of training departments nationwide, and has presented on-site training at the major Navy, Air Force and NASA centers, and for a large number of contractors. Our training increases effectiveness and productivity. Learn from the proven best.

For a Free On-Site Quote Visit Us At: http://www.ATIcourses.com/free_onsite_quote.asp

For Our Current Public Course Schedule Go To: http://www.ATIcourses.com/schedule.htm

M w ate w ri M w. a at AT l• A e TI D IM ria co o l• at ur No er D w se t D ia w o w. N s. u l• co pl o D AT t m ica o D I u co p N te ot ur lic w D se at w u s. e • AT w. pli co A IM AT ca m TI t e I at co • M er at A ur T i a er w se I w l• ia s . Ma w. D l c t o o AT N m eria AT Ic ot l• ou D IM D rs up o at e l N s. ica w eri ot c w al t o w. • D m e• up D AT o AT lic Ic N I at M ou ot e at rs D er es up ia .c lic l om a te

What this course is about

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‹ The ARPA Architecture and Protocols

‹ Details of the Internet protocols in operation, showing frames, cells and packets.

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‹ An introduction to SNMP-based network management

‹ An introduction to the next generation Internet protocol — IPv6.

‹ Information sources for further research

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M w ate w ri M w. a at AT l• A e TI D IM ria co o l• at ur No er D w se t D ia w o w. N s. u l• co pl o D AT t m ica o D I u co p N te ot ur lic w D se at w u s. e • AT w. pli co A IM AT ca m TI t e I at co • M er at A ur T i a er w se I w l• ia s . Ma w. D l c t o o AT N m eria AT Ic ot l• ou D IM D rs up o at e l N s. ica w eri ot c w al t o w. • D m e• up D AT o AT lic Ic N I at M ou ot e at rs D er es up ia .c lic l om a te

Table of Contents

1. Using TCP/IP and the Internet Protocols

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2. Supporting TCP/IP and the Internet Protocols 3. Implementing the Network Interface Connection 4. Implementing the Internet Connection

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5. Implementing the Host-to-Host Connection

6. Implementing the Process/Application Connection 7. Managing the Internet

8. The Next Generation — IPv6

9. References for Further Study

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ARPA Core Protocols

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IP Header

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IP Address Formats

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M w ate w ri M w. a at AT l• A e TI D IM ria co o l• at ur No er D w se t D ia w o w. N s. u l• co pl o D AT t m ica o D I u co p N te ot ur lic w D se at w u s. e • AT w. pli co A IM AT ca m TI t e I at co • M er at A ur T i a er w se I w l• ia s . Ma w. D l c t o o AT N m eria AT Ic ot l• ou D IM D rs up o at e l N s. ica w eri ot c w al t o w. • D m e• up D AT o AT lic Ic N I at M ou ot e at rs D er es up ia .c lic l om a te AT I

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Case Study: Login to Remote Host

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M w ate w ri M w. a at AT l• A e TI D IM ria co o l• at ur No er D w se t D ia w o w. N s. u l• co pl o D AT t m ica o D I u co p N te ot ur lic w D se at w u s. e • AT w. pli co A IM AT ca m TI t e I at co • M er at A ur T i a er w se I w l• ia s . Ma w. D l c t o o AT N m eria AT Ic ot l• ou D IM D rs up o at e l N s. ica w eri ot c w al t o w. • D m e• up D AT o AT lic Ic N I at M ou ot e at rs D er es up ia .c lic l om a te AT I

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TCP Header Format

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M w ate w ri M w. a at AT l• A e TI D IM ria co o l• at ur No er D w se t D ia w o w. N s. u l• co pl o D AT t m ica o D I u co p N te ot ur lic w D se at w u s. e • AT w. pli co A IM AT ca m TI t e I at co • M er at A ur T i a er w se I w l• ia s . Ma w. D l c t o o AT N m eria AT Ic ot l• ou D IM D rs up o at e l N s. ica w eri ot c w al t o w. • D m e• up D AT o AT lic Ic N I at M ou ot e at rs D er es up ia .c lic l om a te AT I

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Process/Application Layer Protocols

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M w ate w ri M w. a at AT l• A e TI D IM ria co o l• at ur No er D w se t D ia w o w. N s. u l• co pl o D AT t m ica o D I u co p N te ot ur lic w D se at w u s. e • AT w. pli co A IM AT ca m TI t e I at co • M er at A ur T i a er w se I w l• ia s . Ma w. D l c t o o AT N m eria AT Ic ot l• ou D IM D rs up o at e l N s. ica w eri ot c w al t o w. • D m e• up D AT o AT lic Ic N I at M ou ot e at rs D er es up ia .c lic l om a te AT I

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SNMPv3 PDU Structure

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Implementing IPv6

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Migrating to the Next Generation Internet Protocol

Copyright 2004 All Rights Reserved

Presented by Mark A. Miller, P.E. DigiNet Corporation®

‹ The shortcomings of the current Internet Protocol

‹ Design goals for the Next Generation Internet Protocol

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M w ate w ri M w. a at AT l• A e TI D IM ria co o l• at ur No er D w se t D ia w o w. N s. u l• co pl o D AT t m ica o D I u co p N te ot ur lic w D se at w u s. e • AT w. pli co A IM AT ca m TI t e I at co • M er at A ur T i a er w se I w l• ia s . Ma w. D l c t o o AT N m eria AT Ic ot l• ou D IM D rs up o at e l N s. ica w eri ot c w al t o w. • D m e• up D AT o AT lic Ic N I at M ou ot e at rs D er es up ia .c lic l om a te

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What this Course is About

‹ IPv6 architecture, addressing, and protocol details

‹ Transition strategies for moving from IPv4 to IPv6

‹ Information sources for further research

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M w ate w ri M w. a at AT l• A e TI D IM ria co o l• at ur No er D w se t D ia w o w. N s. u l• co pl o D AT t m ica o D I u co p N te ot ur lic w D se at w u s. e • AT w. pli co A IM AT ca m TI t e I at co • M er at A ur T i a er w se I w l• ia s . Ma w. D l c t o o AT N m eria AT Ic ot l• ou D IM D rs up o at e l N s. ica w eri ot c w al t o w. • D m e• up D AT o AT lic Ic N I at M ou ot e at rs D er es up ia .c lic l om a te

Table of Contents

1. The Need for IPng

2. IPv6 Specification

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3. Addressing Architecture

4. Intranetwork Communication

5. Autoconfiguration and Local Network Issues

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6. Routing Issues 7. Host Issues

8. Network Management Issues 9. Transition Strategies

10. Vendor Solutions and Implementation Plans 11. References for Further Study

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M w ate w ri M w. a at AT l• A e TI D IM ria co o l• at ur No er D w se t D ia w o w. N s. u l• co pl o D AT t m ica o D I u co p N te ot ur lic w D se at w u s. e • AT w. pli co A IM AT ca m TI t e I at co • M er at A ur T i a er w se I w l• ia s . Ma w. D l c t o o AT N m eria AT Ic ot l• ou D IM D rs up o at e l N s. ica w eri ot c w al t o w. • D m e• up D AT o AT lic Ic N I at M ou ot e at rs D er es up ia .c lic l om a te

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IPv6 Packet Format

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Case Study 1

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M w ate w ri M w. a at AT l• A e TI D IM ria co o l• at ur No er D w se t D ia w o w. N s. u l• co pl o D AT t m ica o D I u co p N te ot ur lic w D se at w u s. e • AT w. pli co A IM AT ca m TI t e I at co • M er at A ur T i a er w se I w l• ia s . Ma w. D l c t o o AT N m eria AT Ic ot l• ou D IM D rs up o at e l N s. ica w eri ot c w al t o w. • D m e• up D AT o AT lic Ic N I at M ou ot e at rs D er es up ia .c lic l om a te

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Addressing Architecture

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M w ate w ri M w. a at AT l• A e TI D IM ria co o l• at ur No er D w se t D ia w o w. N s. u l• co pl o D AT t m ica o D I u co p N te ot ur lic w D se at w u s. e • AT w. pli co A IM AT ca m TI t e I at co • M er at A ur T i a er w se I w l• ia s . Ma w. D l c t o o AT N m eria AT Ic ot l• ou D IM D rs up o at e l N s. ica w eri ot c w al t o w. • D m e• up D AT o AT lic Ic N I at M ou ot e at rs D er es up ia .c lic l om a te

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Path MTU Discovery Process

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M w ate w ri M w. a at AT l• A e TI D IM ria co o l• at ur No er D w se t D ia w o w. N s. u l• co pl o D AT t m ica o D I u co p N te ot ur lic w D se at w u s. e • AT w. pli co A IM AT ca m TI t e I at co • M er at A ur T i a er w se I w l• ia s . Ma w. D l c t o o AT N m eria AT Ic ot l• ou D IM D rs up o at e l N s. ica w eri ot c w al t o w. • D m e• up D AT o AT lic Ic N I at M ou ot e at rs D er es up ia .c lic l om a te

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Security Association Between Virtual Private Networks

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M w ate w ri M w. a at AT l• A e TI D IM ria co o l• at ur No er D w se t D ia w o w. N s. u l• co pl o D AT t m ica o D I u co p N te ot ur lic w D se at w u s. e • AT w. pli co A IM AT ca m TI t e I at co • M er at A ur T i a er w se I w l• ia s . Ma w. D l c t o o AT N m eria AT Ic ot l• ou D IM D rs up o at e l N s. ica w eri ot c w al t o w. • D m e• up D AT o AT lic Ic N I at M ou ot e at rs D er es up ia .c lic l om a te

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Internet OID Tree and IPv6 Branches

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M w ate w ri M w. a at AT l• A e TI D IM ria co o l• at ur No er D w se t D ia w o w. N s. u l• co pl o D AT t m ica o D I u co p N te ot ur lic w D se at w u s. e • AT w. pli co A IM AT ca m TI t e I at co • M er at A ur T i a er w se I w l• ia s . Ma w. D l c t o o AT N m eria AT Ic ot l• ou D IM D rs up o at e l N s. ica w eri ot c w al t o w. • D m e• up D AT o AT lic Ic N I at M ou ot e at rs D er es up ia .c lic l om a te

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Dual IP Stack Architecture

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Boost Your Skills with On-Site Courses Tailored to Your Needs M w ate w ri M w. a at AT l• A e TI D IM ria co o l• at ur No er D w se t D ia w o w. N s. u l• co pl o D AT t m ica o Ic Du N te ou pl ot rs ica w D es te w up AT w. li .c • om AT IM AT ca t IM Ic e • at o er at ur AT er w ial s es I M w • ia w. D l . a c t o o AT N m eria AT Ic ot l• ou D IM D rs up o at es li N e w ri c . ot a co t w al e w. • D m • up AT Do AT lic Ic N I at M ou ot e at rs D er es up ia .c lic l om a te

The Applied Technology Institute specializes in training programs for technical professionals. Our courses keep you current in the state-of-the-art technology that is essential to keep your company on the cutting edge in today’s highly competitive marketplace. For 20 years, we have earned the trust of training departments nationwide, and have presented on-site training at the major Navy, Air Force and NASA centers, and for a large number of contractors. Our training increases effectiveness and productivity. Learn from the proven best. ATI’s on-site courses offer these cost-effective advantages: • You design, control, and schedule the course.

• Since the program involves only your personnel, confidentiality is maintained. You can freely discuss company issues and programs. Classified programs can also be arranged. • Your employees may attend all or only the most relevant part of the course.

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• Our instructors are the best in the business, averaging 25 to 35 years of practical, realworld experience. Carefully selected for both technical expertise and teaching ability, they provide information that is practical and ready to use immediately. • Our on-site programs can save your facility 30% to 50%, plus additional savings by eliminating employee travel time and expenses.

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• The ATI Satisfaction Guarantee: You must be completely satisfied with our program.

We suggest you look at ATI course descriptions in this catalog and on the ATI website. Visit and bookmark ATI’s website at http://www.ATIcourses.com for descriptions of all of our courses in these areas: • Communications & Computer Programming • Radar/EW/Combat Systems

• Signal Processing & Information Technology • Sonar & Acoustic Engineering • Spacecraft & Satellite Engineering

I suggest that you read through these course descriptions and then call me personally, Jim Jenkins, at (410) 531-6034, and I’ll explain what we can do for you, what it will cost, and what you can expect in results and future capabilities.

Our training helps you and your organization remain competitive in this changing world. Register online at www.aticourses.com or call ATI at 888.501.2100 or 410.531.6034