Sunny like Sunday Morning. Man, you are such a jewel find. Straight to the point. Watched several of your videos. Eloquent, focus (no music distractions, no non-sense extra stuff, no need to see you all the time (maximize space to the subject matter) Learning with you is a bliss. Thank you sir.
Sunny, I’ve watched your channel for a second and I felt like you’re the best of the best. And by the way, your English is very clear and easy to understand. Thank you Professor Sunny.
Such lengthy concepts explained in a short, simple, systematic, easy & profound manner! Hats off to your genius!!!!! Transcending the language barrier effortlessly!!!!! Too good to be true! Simply MARVELLOUS!!!!! THANKS A GODZILLIONS!!!!! GOD BLESS YOU!!!!!
Hello Professor Sunny, I am late onto learning NETWORKING and I have watched read and paid to understand TCP/IP - Networking, this part of CIDR and subnetting had being very difficult for me, with your sunny table, it is extremely easy to understand it. Thank you a world "if you cannot explain it simply , you do not understand it enough" Albert Einstein
You have made this so easy for all of us. So many years this has haunted me, thank you very much Sunny, you are truly an amazing teacher. Love from India
My hat is off to you, Sir, your presentations are very articulate, with just enough details for a basic to intermediate user. Keep up the excellent work!
I had to watch the video many times to understand but I finally got it! The hardest part for me was understanding how you got the second four in the equation, but once I understood that and stopped trying to overthink it and finish watching the video, everything was good. Thanks a bunch!
You are amazing. Best explanation of something that is very technical. You are one of the very best teachers that I have ever heard. Please continue your online work.
Thank you @Sunny Classroom for your easy, clear instructions. I am currently studying for my first tech certification, CCNA. This has been an immense help to me 👏
Sunny is the way to go. You are awesome sir! Also there is absolutely nothing wrong with your accent tbh it is very easy to comprehend even at 2x speed. Great teacher!
Hello Sunny, I'd like to thank you for your amazing videos. I have a question as regards the Sunny table, what determines the figures in the subnet mask column? Is it the subnet mask of the network ID given? Or is it /24 - /32 for all scenarios.
Should have watched your videos sooner. The fact you even provide examples, as well as the answers, is more than I can say for most other UA-camrs I've seen. Thanks so much, man.
I would like to personally thank you so much for explaining this subject in such an easy way. I'm in an IT learning program and the videos we watch/paid for are pretty good but not as easy to understand as yours. Thank you so much.
I was a little confused at first as to how you got to subnet 16. I had to watch that part a couple of times but I finally got it. Thanks again for helping!
These are great. I really appreciate you making these. The Chinglese accent is not a bad exchange for causing me to lose my fear of subnetting lol Thank you much!
Thank you so much for your help. I gave up on my Cisco CCNA 01 practical test/EXAM yesterday Friday because I wasn't sure about my knowledge and now I have confidence to go try again. Am from Namibia, thank you so much!!!
You are welcome! I know CCNA has a lot of things to know and many are tedious and boring but do not give up easily. Once you know some basics and you will find it interesting and computers communicate with each other just like people and many protocols are made just like those in our daily life.
OMG you made it so easy to understand and do. I have had the Cisco CCNA CCNP and Network+ I never pursued due to Subnetting now I am back in CCNA and I am so glad to have found your video my life long dream was CCIE
The question basically asks to create 3 subnets and each of these 3 will have it's own 3 subnets ( so the total required is 12 subnets FROM THE MAIN Network ID). So basically in this method (subnetting a subnet), we need to do the following: -Draw the table. -See the prefix of the actual main subnet (in our case /26). -See what number corresponding to the 26 ( which is 3 but we use 4). -We multiply this 4 (from the table) by the REQUESTED 4 (from the question). -We see the answer is 16 (4*4) meaning the new subnets that will be created will have /26 prefix and 16 total subnets. -We create a subnetting table (like the first video). that contains all the info such as network id subnetting number of hosts and broadcast.
thanks to clarify I was getting confused with the old video I though it was the same 3 subnets for all departments and basically each deparment needs 3 subnets currect
Bruh. I have watched a lot of youtube videos and this one is the best one so far. Simple and straight to the point. Thanks buddy! You saved me to (almost) fail my course lol
Hi Sunny, Thanks so much for explaining the subnet and subnetting a subnet in simple terms. I have one question with "subnetting a subnet" topic. How did you come up with the number 16 when you further subnetted between 64 and 128? From 64 to 80 to 96 then 112. How did you come up with the number 16? Please advise. Thank you!
I've been in IT 35 years and never seen it explain that simple. You should follow up with showing what /26 netmask is which is 255.255.255.192. Rather simple. Enjoyed your Chinglist.
Thank you so so much Sunny, your method is the easiest I've seen and thanks to the Sunny table I am able to subnet with confidence thank you so much 🙏♥️
quick question. In you video we had to make 3 subnets. and we used the sunny to come to a conclusion that 4 subnets would be suitable. what if we had a subnet of /27 and we needed to make 4 more subnets. would we just multiply 8x4=32 and use the subnet 32 column?
Thank you so much! Our facilitators here in Nigeria tells us that we'd have to suffer like they did to learn networking. 😢 I fell in love with subnetting after watching this 😢 I can explain to my colleagues now 😮
How to: (a) determine whether an IP (e.g., /30) is from a Subnetted Subnet or just from a Subnet? (b) When I determine that the IP is from a Subnetted Subnet, how do I reverse engineer it to the previous, original Subnet (e.g. /26)?
Hello Sunny, Im struggling with understanding your conclusion to the Practice question. You say the requirement is 3 subnets which I know you cant do. My next logical conclusion would have been to use /26 which gives 4 subnets and one subnet would be lost. In your answers you choose /27 which gives you 8 subnets. Does that not mean that you will lose 5 subnets? Why /27 and not /26? Any response will be appreciated. Also thank you for making these videos they are very interesting and helpful.
Please revise the video @ 4:31, This is subnetting a subnet, meaning he goes on to divide a subnet into smaller subnets to take advantage of it by using CIDR in his sunny table
not off hand ill have to have a look through my questions and get back to you but i know there where some for example asking what mask for 500 subnets or something to that effect where i couldnt use the chart,or whats the maximum number of subnets for a /21
Hi sir! thank you very much your such a good teacher! thanks for laying it out and pointing out all the "why" why we do this why we do that. thanks alot!
I understood the process but I am confused between network id and subnet id. I watched the previous video "subnetting is easy" and understood that. But in this one, how do we know that the given id is subnet id and not network id? Here the network id is 125.23.200.64/26 In previous video, it was 192.168.4.0/24 Why did we use two seperate method? Is it because it is for different network?
Thank you! I'm confused by the 2nd practice scenario in description. The answers have 29 usable hosts, (ie 129-158) but state 30 usable.... am I missing something?
Thank you so much, Sir, for the simplest explanation for this subject. I really impressed on the Sunny Subnetting Table. it really makes calculation so much easy to understand. Is the sunny subnetting table is a result of class A - class E of the networks? or what are the basic ideas behind the sunny subnetting table, before you finally depicted it in such a comprehensive table like that?
@@ervinbucka3251 4x4 first 4 because it's in the /26 column and the second 4 because 3 subnets cant be created so move to the next higher number which is 4
if you're subnetting 1 of 4 /26 subnet ranges into 4 additional subnets. DO YOU effect the other 3 subnets? Do the 0 - 128 - and 192 subnets become /28, or is it just the 64 network ID that gets the /28 subnet mask? In other words can you still have 62 host ID's in the other /26 networks, or does the whole array get converted to /28? Thanks your a god!
Hi Sunny, many question is like this "How many bits do you need to borrow from the host portion?" How do I found this information from Sunny table? If you do math you take 2^4=16 then after to calculate host you take 2^4-2=14. If i'm right of course?
good question!!. we start from the subnet mask is /26, then you are asked to subnet it into another "four pieces", you need to borrow 2 bits from the host portion, then the new subnet mask is /28. Your way of thinking is even simpler. Many thanks for your comment. You really help me to think in a brand new way.
Hello sir, thank you so much for your lessons they make my studies easier, Please I have a problem understanding why did you do 4*4 to get 16 in the first example while you need only 3 sub-nets. Please bear with me, thank you so much
If you look at the subnet row in the table, you see you can have 2 or 4 subnets, but not 3 (each octet in an IP address can contain 256 hosts). Since you can't divide the 256 hosts into equal parts here, you either pick up minimum number close to 3, which is 4 and you don't have to use the 4th subnet. Just use 3 for each department, mentioned in the previous example.
@@theemiddleone this is probably really late, but I learned it when the prompt asked for 3 subnets for 3 different departments (which is 9 subnets total). 9 is within 8 and 16, so we must use 16 subnets and then continue with the /28 subnet mask in the Sunny Table. Like Sunny mentioned, it's just an extra step from subnetting regularly.
@@XagonogaX You're spot on! I was confused at first thinking we could use 4 subnets with the mask of /26 since they only needed 3 subnets. But the devil was in the details, "3 subnets for 3 different departments (which is 9 subnets total). 9 is within 8 and 16, so we must use 16 subnets and then continue with the /28". Thanks for the clarity!
Thanks so much Sunny for very helpful videos! Do you have any videos of how to do the subnetting when i am not provided with the /26 number, rather i am just provided with the network ID and required number of subnets? Thanks
Hello sir, upon checking and trying out the Practice Question and comparing from the answer you provided, isn't it supposed to only have 14 # of usable host instead of 30?
great question and I am glad you ask this because less than 24 is a much longer process with a bigger table. And in normal situations, /24 and less is much common.
I’m studying network for my CCNA test. Your videos are simple to understand and very straight forward. I’ll watch all your videos on your channel. Question, I read that you teach programming languages too, where can I find your videos for it? Thank you!
you make subnetting so easy , thank you . I have a little bit confused on this VLSM. i don't understand why you multiply 4 by 4. and next how do we know that this ip address need VLSM instead of subnetting?
if you are given an IP with /24, you know it is subnetting. If you are given an IP with a subnet mask less than /24, such as /26, you know it is asking you to subnet a subnet.
your first question is a little bit of math. Thinking a line. After you evenly divide it into four segments, you are asked to evenly divide four smaller segments from one segment. It is like dividing this number line into 16 smaller segments. 4x4=16. Draw a line and try yourself.
Thank you for the tutorial! With this video following the Subnetting is Simple video, why is the network ID to be further subnetted not a 192.168.4.x/26 address? Also, why is the 'endpoint' in this video 255 rather than 256? 0 + 128 = 128. but 128 + 128 = 256.
Question: How did we choose the first "4" on the sunny table? I would think that is the closest number to 3 for the subnets we could create for the company. However, the second "4" is saying the same thing. Please help. Thanks in advance🙏
This is crazy simplified!!
Yep 5 years on and we still benefit from your simplified tutorials.
God bless you abundantly
Hi Sunny - I would like to express my gratitude for providing the world brilliant tutorials with utmost dedication, preciseness and professionalism.
Thank you for watching! Check out my other videos please!
I thought subnetting was the digital version of witchcraft until I bumped into your channel. You make hard things look so easy. Thank you !!!
😂😂😂😂
😮😂😂
Sunny like Sunday Morning. Man, you are such a jewel find. Straight to the point. Watched several of your videos. Eloquent, focus (no music distractions, no non-sense extra stuff, no need to see you all the time (maximize space to the subject matter) Learning with you is a bliss. Thank you sir.
Sunny, I’ve watched your channel for a second and I felt like you’re the best of the best. And by the way, your English is very clear and easy to understand. Thank you Professor Sunny.
You are Welcome!
I think I'm in love, simple graphs,charming accent,clear audio, own subtitles, I didn't know anything about nets!
Thank you very much!
The ease that you explain and apply this is staggering. This group of videos equals an entire semester and I can do it with ease and confidence
Such lengthy concepts explained in a short, simple, systematic, easy & profound manner! Hats off to your genius!!!!! Transcending the language barrier effortlessly!!!!! Too good to be true! Simply MARVELLOUS!!!!! THANKS A GODZILLIONS!!!!! GOD BLESS YOU!!!!!
Glad it was helpful!
Hello Professor Sunny, I am late onto learning NETWORKING and I have watched read and paid to understand TCP/IP - Networking, this part of CIDR and subnetting had being very difficult for me, with your sunny table, it is extremely easy to understand it. Thank you a world
"if you cannot explain it simply , you do not understand it enough" Albert Einstein
You are most welcome!
I love this quote ❤, and sure loving Sunny’s Videos , thank you .. right on with that quote again
You have made this so easy for all of us. So many years this has haunted me, thank you very much Sunny, you are truly an amazing teacher. Love from India
My hat is off to you, Sir, your presentations are very articulate, with just enough details for a basic to intermediate user. Keep up the excellent work!
Dear Sunny. You are an excellent teacher. I am changing my career towards cyber security, and your videos are a gem. Thanks!
Man, this Mr. knows his network. Kudos for real.👏
I had to watch the video many times to understand but I finally got it! The hardest part for me was understanding how you got the second four in the equation, but once I understood that and stopped trying to overthink it and finish watching the video, everything was good. Thanks a bunch!
Glad it helped!
I love this method. With Sunny table given, the rest step is straightforward.
Subnetting a subnet that goes into another subnet makes for a subnetted subnet. I loved the video you saved me.
I had to watch the video over 5 times, but I finally got it. I'm sure it will help the the ICND1 Exam. Thanks!
I appreciate your hardworking and never-give-up spirit!
I’m working on my CompTIA Network+ subnetting always stumped me. This method was easy for me to understand and follow along. Thank you!
How anyone could vote a thumbs-down to this humble genius is beyond me!
I was FREAKING out about subnettting but WOW you TOTALLY ROCK! Thanks for the tutorial.
You are amazing. Best explanation of something that is very technical. You are one of the very best teachers that I have ever heard. Please continue your online work.
Sunny is a rockstar in teaching IT! Love your videos!
one of the easiest way to resolve subnetting. i wish i knew this 10 years ago... I learnt this the hard way back then. thanks sunny
You nailed it Sunny. I have never watch such a simple video before explaining complex concept. Loved your ascent and the patience.
Thank you @Sunny Classroom for your easy, clear instructions. I am currently studying for my first tech certification, CCNA. This has been an immense help to me 👏
Sunny is the way to go. You are awesome sir! Also there is absolutely nothing wrong with your accent tbh it is very easy to comprehend even at 2x speed. Great teacher!
I forgot all of this, its been years. Just watching this, i feel refresh. Thank you Sir!
You are welcome!
it's amazing how simple you've made this concept to understand! the sunny table is essential thank you!!!🥰
Hello Sunny, I'd like to thank you for your amazing videos. I have a question as regards the Sunny table, what determines the figures in the subnet mask column? Is it the subnet mask of the network ID given? Or is it /24 - /32 for all scenarios.
Should have watched your videos sooner. The fact you even provide examples, as well as the answers, is more than I can say for most other UA-camrs I've seen. Thanks so much, man.
I would like to personally thank you so much for explaining this subject in such an easy way. I'm in an IT learning program and the videos we watch/paid for are pretty good but not as easy to understand as yours. Thank you so much.
Sunny table has helped me more,thanks my teacher ,you are great teacher,i never know this befor sunny.well done.
Thank you soo much Sunny... I can't express how grateful I am to you...
Your method is so simple and easy to comprehend.
Thank you
You are welcome!
I understood this better than my University classes. Thank you so much!
I was ready to give up. Thank you so much for making these videos
Thank you so much for the video. I finally understand subnetting in easy way.
Thank you from Rome
I was a little confused at first as to how you got to subnet 16. I had to watch that part a couple of times but I finally got it. Thanks again for helping!
Glad I could help!
Same here. I'm a bit confused too. Can you explain?
These are great. I really appreciate you making these. The Chinglese accent is not a bad exchange for causing me to lose my fear of subnetting lol Thank you much!
You are welcome!
Thank you so much for your help. I gave up on my Cisco CCNA 01 practical test/EXAM yesterday Friday because I wasn't sure about my knowledge and now I have confidence to go try again. Am from Namibia, thank you so much!!!
You are welcome! I know CCNA has a lot of things to know and many are tedious and boring but do not give up easily. Once you know some basics and you will find it interesting and computers communicate with each other just like people and many protocols are made just like those in our daily life.
the answers are online bud
OMG you made it so easy to understand and do. I have had the Cisco CCNA CCNP and Network+ I never pursued due to Subnetting now I am back in CCNA and I am so glad to have found your video my life long dream was CCIE
The question basically asks to create 3 subnets and each of these 3 will have it's own 3 subnets ( so the total required is 12 subnets FROM THE MAIN Network ID).
So basically in this method (subnetting a subnet), we need to do the following:
-Draw the table.
-See the prefix of the actual main subnet (in our case /26).
-See what number corresponding to the 26 ( which is 3 but we use 4).
-We multiply this 4 (from the table) by the REQUESTED 4 (from the question).
-We see the answer is 16 (4*4) meaning the new subnets that will be created will have /26 prefix and 16 total subnets.
-We create a subnetting table (like the first video). that contains all the info such as network id subnetting number of hosts and broadcast.
what?
thanks to clarify I was getting confused with the old video I though it was the same 3 subnets for all departments and basically each deparment needs 3 subnets currect
Bruh. I have watched a lot of youtube videos and this one is the best one so far. Simple and straight to the point. Thanks buddy! You saved me to (almost) fail my course lol
I used your chart on my Final Exam for Network Administration. Thank you!!!!
You are welcome!
@@sunnyclassroom24 why we need to take 16 16 /28
@@sunnyclassroom24 why we need to take 16 16 /28
Thank you! You are amazing! You need your own swag! Like "How to crush the network the Sunny way!"I'd buy it!
You’re amazing and I am forever greatful by your clear easy to follow along instructions! 👏👏👏
Sunny, am from a french speaking country, but let me tell you as you explain this subject like no one...I got my part as well.
Hi Sunny,
Thanks so much for explaining the subnet and subnetting a subnet in simple terms.
I have one question with "subnetting a subnet" topic. How did you come up with the number 16 when you further subnetted between 64 and 128?
From 64 to 80 to 96 then 112. How did you come up with the number 16? Please advise. Thank you!
Very Good English. Most Excellent Teaching Method. Thanks, Mr. Sunny.
I've been in IT 35 years and never seen it explain that simple. You should follow up with showing what /26 netmask is which is 255.255.255.192. Rather simple. Enjoyed your Chinglist.
where did you get that 192 ? or sometimes I see 254?
Thank you so so much Sunny, your method is the easiest I've seen and thanks to the Sunny table I am able to subnet with confidence thank you so much 🙏♥️
You make it so easy to understand. Thank you Sunny
Thank you so much, you taught me more then my teacher has ever.
You are welcome!
I am extremely grateful to you for this videos! You are a great teacher
quick question. In you video we had to make 3 subnets. and we used the sunny to come to a conclusion that 4 subnets would be suitable. what if we had a subnet of /27 and we needed to make 4 more subnets. would we just multiply 8x4=32 and use the subnet 32 column?
It works perfectly. Thank you very much for sharing your method.
Thank you so much! Our facilitators here in Nigeria tells us that we'd have to suffer like they did to learn networking. 😢 I fell in love with subnetting after watching this 😢 I can explain to my colleagues now 😮
Hello. I'm from Nigeria too. My only question is why he multiplied 4 by 4?
Thank you so much. Gone through many videos. But this seems the ultimate key. Really helpful. Thanks again.
You're welcome!
This video was awesome! Thank you for your effort in creating this. Very helpful, and I love your line example. it was a great analogy!
Glad it was helpful!
How to: (a) determine whether an IP (e.g., /30) is from a Subnetted Subnet or just from a Subnet? (b) When I determine that the IP is from a Subnetted Subnet, how do I reverse engineer it to the previous, original Subnet (e.g. /26)?
Great job. Really I appreciate your effort. But I have a question how can we make difference between subnetting and subnetting a subnet ?
Hello Sunny, Im struggling with understanding your conclusion to the Practice question. You say the requirement is 3 subnets which I know you cant do. My next logical conclusion would have been to use /26 which gives 4 subnets and one subnet would be lost. In your answers you choose /27 which gives you 8 subnets. Does that not mean that you will lose 5 subnets? Why /27 and not /26? Any response will be appreciated. Also thank you for making these videos they are very interesting and helpful.
Please revise the video @ 4:31, This is subnetting a subnet, meaning he goes on to divide a subnet into smaller subnets to take advantage of it by using CIDR in his sunny table
@@marxiaservices7841 Thank you it makes sense now. 👍
not off hand ill have to have a look through my questions and get back to you but i know there where some for example asking what mask for 500 subnets or something to that effect where i couldnt use the chart,or whats the maximum number of subnets for a /21
Thanks!! Sunny... But can you make a video for your practice question: 125.23.200.128/25
Hey Sunny. This table starts from /24 only, what about below that like /20 or /13?
Hi sir! thank you very much your such a good teacher! thanks for laying it out and pointing out all the "why" why we do this why we do that. thanks alot!
thank you very much
your videos are more usefull than a university term
thanks a lot for your compliment.
Loving the Sunny Way! ☀️
brilliant simple point to point explanation.
Simply awesome videos .. by far one of the best educational videos I've ever watched. Thank you Sunny!
I understood the process but I am confused between network id and subnet id. I watched the previous video "subnetting is easy" and understood that. But in this one, how do we know that the given id is subnet id and not network id?
Here the network id is 125.23.200.64/26
In previous video, it was 192.168.4.0/24
Why did we use two seperate method? Is it because it is for different network?
Great job sir. Your wealth of knowledge is awesome .
Cheers
Thank you Sunny, now I know how to subnet a subnet...
Great! I am happy for you.
Algoritmo risolutivo che ben si presta ad implementazione software. Ottimo Sonny. 😁👍
Thank you! I'm confused by the 2nd practice scenario in description. The answers have 29 usable hosts, (ie 129-158) but state 30 usable.... am I missing something?
Thank you so much, Sir, for the simplest explanation for this subject. I really impressed on the Sunny Subnetting Table. it really makes calculation so much easy to understand. Is the sunny subnetting table is a result of class A - class E of the networks? or what are the basic ideas behind the sunny subnetting table, before you finally depicted it in such a comprehensive table like that?
Thank you very much for your kind words. The idea behind the table is to divide the number e.g. 256 evenly.
Sunny Classroom i am having difficulty trying to understand why you choose the number 16 in the row. Can you please explain that?
@@ervinbucka3251 4x4 first 4 because it's in the /26 column and the second 4 because 3 subnets cant be created so move to the next higher number which is 4
Great Teaching, really clear now. just a question - when would you use /31 and /32 subnets?
if you're subnetting 1 of 4 /26 subnet ranges into 4 additional subnets. DO YOU effect the other 3 subnets? Do the 0 - 128 - and 192 subnets become /28, or is it just the 64 network ID that gets the /28 subnet mask? In other words can you still have 62 host ID's in the other /26 networks, or does the whole array get converted to /28? Thanks your a god!
Thank you Sunny, you are great at explaining these things.
best teacher, say la ilaha ila allah
Hi Sunny, many question is like this "How many bits do you need to borrow from the host portion?" How do I found this information from Sunny table? If you do math you take 2^4=16 then after to calculate host you take 2^4-2=14. If i'm right of course?
good question!!. we start from the subnet mask is /26, then you are asked to subnet it into another "four pieces", you need to borrow 2 bits from the host portion, then the new subnet mask is /28. Your way of thinking is even simpler. Many thanks for your comment. You really help me to think in a brand new way.
Your chinglish sounds really fun. That aside, this video helped me with subnetting.
You make my day shine! ☀️☀️☀️
Hello sir, thank you so much for your lessons they make my studies easier, Please I have a problem understanding why did you do 4*4 to get 16 in the first example while you need only 3 sub-nets. Please bear with me, thank you so much
If you look at the subnet row in the table, you see you can have 2 or 4 subnets, but not 3 (each octet in an IP address can contain 256 hosts).
Since you can't divide the 256 hosts into equal parts here, you either pick up minimum number close to 3, which is 4 and you don't have to use the 4th subnet. Just use 3 for each department, mentioned in the previous example.
@@theemiddleone this is probably really late, but I learned it when the prompt asked for 3 subnets for 3 different departments (which is 9 subnets total). 9 is within 8 and 16, so we must use 16 subnets and then continue with the /28 subnet mask in the Sunny Table. Like Sunny mentioned, it's just an extra step from subnetting regularly.
@@XagonogaX You're spot on! I was confused at first thinking we could use 4 subnets with the mask of /26 since they only needed 3 subnets. But the devil was in the details, "3 subnets for 3 different departments (which is 9 subnets total). 9 is within 8 and 16, so we must use 16 subnets and then continue with the /28". Thanks for the clarity!
@@VeeVaa1966 SO glad you commented that, was searchin for this
@@VeeVaa1966 so you guys means each department need 3 subnets. so total 9 subnet rite? if answer is yes, im clear.
What about subnetting a subnet with prefix /20, /21, /22, /23 ???
You won’t see those in Net+ :)
Is /16 just one subnet? @@Clxiro
@@johnparker1771 no additional bits are borrowed, therefore only 1 subnet is present. You’re correct
you litterraly saved my love i watched touhsands of video only your method made me move forward thank uuuuuuuuuuuuuu
Thanks so much Sunny for very helpful videos! Do you have any videos of how to do the subnetting when i am not provided with the /26 number, rather i am just provided with the network ID and required number of subnets? Thanks
Hello sir, upon checking and trying out the Practice Question and comparing from the answer you provided, isn't it supposed to only have 14 # of usable host instead of 30?
What if the subnet mask given to us is less than 24? As its not included in the sunny table
great question and I am glad you ask this because less than 24 is a much longer process with a bigger table. And in normal situations, /24 and less is much common.
@@sunnyclassroom24- please do a video from /8 to /32 or further. This really helped me out.
@@blackcoffee730 will do. Thank you very much for your patience.
/24 is basically a class B subneting(maybe C i dont know), usual in home networks. so its common
Very clear video, thanks Sunny!
You are welcome and thanks.
Thank you for explaining so easily.👍
My pleasure 😊
Lovely method. Great great job mate! Many thanks!
You're welcome!
I am so happy i have found you wish you were my networking prof
i wish too.
I’m studying network for my CCNA test. Your videos are simple to understand and very straight forward. I’ll watch all your videos on your channel.
Question, I read that you teach programming languages too, where can I find your videos for it?
Thank you!
I haven't.
you make subnetting so easy , thank you . I have a little bit confused on this VLSM. i don't understand why you multiply 4 by 4. and next how do we know that this ip address need VLSM instead of subnetting?
if you are given an IP with /24, you know it is subnetting. If you are given an IP with a subnet mask less than /24, such as /26, you know it is asking you to subnet a subnet.
your first question is a little bit of math. Thinking a line. After you evenly divide it into four segments, you are asked to evenly divide four smaller segments from one segment.
It is like dividing this number line into 16 smaller segments. 4x4=16. Draw a line and try yourself.
Thank you so much, it becomes clear now
@@arontigerful welcome
hi Sunny - i would really want to Thank you am just from doing my exam and let's just say that you know the magic
outstanding ! Glad i found your channel
Glad you enjoy it!
Thank you for the tutorial! With this video following the Subnetting is Simple video, why is the network ID to be further subnetted not a 192.168.4.x/26 address? Also, why is the 'endpoint' in this video 255 rather than 256? 0 + 128 = 128. but 128 + 128 = 256.
Question: How did we choose the first "4" on the sunny table? I would think that is the closest number to 3 for the subnets we could create for the company. However, the second "4" is saying the same thing. Please help. Thanks in advance🙏
very nice video sunny, what happen when we get for example /16 or /18 ? is not in your table, thanks a lot
This is very helpful I’m new to subnetting