👉 *Want more?* Watch the rest of the NAT Series: ua-cam.com/play/PLIFyRwBY_4bQ7tJvbLA9A0v8Fq9l-H923.html 🐦 *Enjoy this content?* Help me out with a like and/or Retweet: twitter.com/ed_pracnet/status/1513944439625977858 📌 *Want to learn Subnetting?* --> ua-cam.com/play/PLIFyRwBY_4bQUE4IB5c4VPRyDoLgOdExE.html 🖧 *Want to learn Computer Networking?* --> ua-cam.com/video/bj-Yfakjllc/v-deo.html
I completely watched this series of 8 video on NAT, trying to understand everything and taking tons of notes. I found the explanations excellent and very clear. Thank you. I had to resort to UA-cam because of how superficially the book on networking I'm reading explained this very important topic (the book is CompTIA Network+ Certification All-in-One Exam Guide, Eighth Edition, by Mike Meyers and Scott Jerningan). Fortunately, I found these videos and this UA-cam channel, which will be my first reference on networking learning from now onwards. I found the pictures and the animations on the videos super useful, and I understand how much time it takes to create such good content. Thanks again.
Hi there! Thank you so much for supporting the channel. You're super thanks is what allows me to continue publishing content for free for everyone else. =) Thanks also for the kind words =). Cheers!
I am not sure why this video does not have millions of views. It is EXTREMELY helpful for a university student, a working professional, a curious mind you name it!! Have saved this NAT playlist.
Glad you enjoyed it, Paritosh =). If you're willing... Do you mind sharing this video on Linked In, Reddit, Twitter, Facebook, or any other social media you use? As an independent creator, that would be an _enormous_ help, and I would appreciate it _greatly_ . It would help me get to that million views ;)
I’m a control systems engineer addressing some gaps in my networking knowledge and these videos have been so so helpful. Thank you. This playlist on NAT has answered a question that has been bugging me for a while. “How do two hosts with the same IP in different local networks establish a connection?”
Awesome, Douglas. Glad these have helped clarify concepts =). Have you seen the Networking Fundamentals series? THat's another great one for cross discipline training: www.practicalnetworking.net/index/networking-fundamentals-how-data-moves-through-the-internet/
Honestly, reading your comment makes me feel better about myself and not in a put downy way. You have such an impressive title and didn't know this. I have no title and knew this.
Ha! good catch! THat's been up for a while and I don't think anyone has pointed it out. Thank you =). It's probably too late to fix though. But either way thanks for bringing it to my attention.
👉 *Want more?* Watch the rest of the NAT Series: ua-cam.com/play/PLIFyRwBY_4bQ7tJvbLA9A0v8Fq9l-H923.html
🐦 *Enjoy this content?* Help me out with a like and/or Retweet: twitter.com/ed_pracnet/status/1513944439625977858
📌 *Want to learn Subnetting?* --> ua-cam.com/play/PLIFyRwBY_4bQUE4IB5c4VPRyDoLgOdExE.html
🖧 *Want to learn Computer Networking?* --> ua-cam.com/video/bj-Yfakjllc/v-deo.html
I completely watched this series of 8 video on NAT, trying to understand everything and taking tons of notes. I found the explanations excellent and very clear. Thank you. I had to resort to UA-cam because of how superficially the book on networking I'm reading explained this very important topic (the book is CompTIA Network+ Certification All-in-One Exam Guide, Eighth Edition, by Mike Meyers and Scott Jerningan). Fortunately, I found these videos and this UA-cam channel, which will be my first reference on networking learning from now onwards. I found the pictures and the animations on the videos super useful, and I understand how much time it takes to create such good content. Thanks again.
Hi there! Thank you so much for supporting the channel. You're super thanks is what allows me to continue publishing content for free for everyone else. =)
Thanks also for the kind words =). Cheers!
I am not sure why this video does not have millions of views. It is EXTREMELY helpful for a university student, a working professional, a curious mind you name it!!
Have saved this NAT playlist.
Glad you enjoyed it, Paritosh =).
If you're willing... Do you mind sharing this video on Linked In, Reddit, Twitter, Facebook, or any other social media you use? As an independent creator, that would be an _enormous_ help, and I would appreciate it _greatly_ .
It would help me get to that million views ;)
@@PracticalNetworking Sure, will do. Glad to spread knowledge!
@@paritoshd9776 Thank you kindly =)
It does not show if there are two privates, how does router determine the rule? When i purchase a router i didnt set this up, but how?
excellent explanation in the simplest way to describe. if still somebody cannot understand then i guess nobody can
Thank you for the kind words =).
Dynamic PAT / NAT videos releasing this week, by the way =)
I’m a control systems engineer addressing some gaps in my networking knowledge and these videos have been so so helpful. Thank you. This playlist on NAT has answered a question that has been bugging me for a while. “How do two hosts with the same IP in different local networks establish a connection?”
Awesome, Douglas. Glad these have helped clarify concepts =).
Have you seen the Networking Fundamentals series? THat's another great one for cross discipline training: www.practicalnetworking.net/index/networking-fundamentals-how-data-moves-through-the-internet/
Honestly, reading your comment makes me feel better about myself and not in a put downy way. You have such an impressive title and didn't know this. I have no title and knew this.
Thank you so much for the presentation . One thing - 8:16 “we could create a third static NAT entry...” actually it’s *PAT entry 😊
Ha! good catch! THat's been up for a while and I don't think anyone has pointed it out. Thank you =).
It's probably too late to fix though. But either way thanks for bringing it to my attention.
Similar to IP port forward, excellent video, Thank you very much
You're very welcome =)
Can we add two mail servers on this inside network and can both use same public IP address?
Same public IP? Yes. Same Public IP & Port? No =/ They would have to be unique ports.
What if two web servers hosting on port 443 but both the servers have different private ip address so in this scenario static PAT will work?
Yes... but you'll need to use a different port number on the shared public IP.
How doyou determine the portto translate? Who makes decisionz?
In my book it refers to DNAT as destination NAT not dynamic NAT. This is also what I'm seeing on google. Are these terms interchangeable?
Is this static pat and port forwarding both are same ?
Yes, for the most part
Great video 😀
Glad you liked it !
When will you make video on Tcp IP
I'm actually building those slides this week =)
@@PracticalNetworking thanks
@@warisgeorge4317 Just did a live stream today... hoping to turn these into polished videos soon: ua-cam.com/video/P5pNzppF1sA/v-deo.html
Very good video.
Thank you!!
You're welcome =)
Thanks
You're welcome, Waris.
excellent
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐👍