Your explanation is so much clear and logical, much better than that of my coach.I don't know what he is bumbling about for the whole semester. I love you and your videos!
In cases of TCP, the sender would be the one realizing that they're not getting acknowledgements back, and so they would assume that their packets are being dropped and send less data in each transmission. Look up TCP backoff
USA has a very good teaching and education system 🎉❤❤
Nicely explained. Thanks!
Your explanation is so much clear and logical, much better than that of my coach.I don't know what he is bumbling about for the whole semester. I love you and your videos!
short and simple explanation! thank u! please make moree
how long does the store-and-forward process take at the router?
If a router doesn't need to notify the source that it has dropped the packet it had sent, how would time-to-live and traceroute work ?
thanks for making this video sir :)
Awesome explanation
Great Video.
Very impressed. Only if I can speak so eloquently. Are you a professor?
yes he is.
Do other routers know a particular router's dropping packets? If not, what if they keep sending packets to the overloaded packets unknowingly?
In cases of TCP, the sender would be the one realizing that they're not getting acknowledgements back, and so they would assume that their packets are being dropped and send less data in each transmission. Look up TCP backoff
The router that is being overloaded sends an ICMP packet to the router overloading it to stop
I see that you have good taste in media players.
Thank you
well explained
LIFES HARD! DROPPIN PACKETS! LAMO