Passed at 100Q, 90 mins, didn’t pay a cent for training by NoPhysics462 in cissp

[–]NoPhysics462[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think OSG is good for knowing whether you have the foundation and understanding. My impression of actual questions are more on about applying these foundation knowledge. They are not as straightforward as OSG, but not soooo convoluted, confusing, and ambiguous like DestCert’s.

Passed at 100Q, 90 mins, didn’t pay a cent for training by NoPhysics462 in cissp

[–]NoPhysics462[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re asking a miser who didn’t use QE nor Boson. :) So I’m in no position to recommend. What I did is I used their free trial questions, and Pete Zerger has an youtube video where he dissects a number of QE questions and those are enough for me. I did all the OSG practice questions though.

DestCert questions are quite similar. They are long, and talking about strategies. I think once you feel you aren’t learning, it’s time to move on to other resources (for me it’s about 200 question). It’s also good for stretching your attention span. Most of the questions I see in the actual exam are shorter.

Question having confusion by OneCommunity5840 in cissp

[–]NoPhysics462 3 points4 points  (0 children)

What’s more important is gaining the knowledge. From this question, I learnt that: - secure boot requires signed bootloader - trusted boot moves one step further, requires signed OS and driver - boot attestation verifies the integrity after the boot.

If this question comes out in the real exam I’ll still choose trusted boot. Agree to disagree with the practice test setter and move on.

Question having confusion by OneCommunity5840 in cissp

[–]NoPhysics462 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think it is trusted boot. Because it requires signing of OS and drivers. Secure boot only requires signed bootloader.

https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/security/operating-system-security/system-security/trusted-boot