Man, that reminds me of the discussions we had about which topology was best, bus, ring, star or daisy chain network. And the struggle if the terminator was faulty 😁
This is a great source of knowledge for any newbies or those wishing to gain a better understanding of what goes on behind the scenes with those 1's and 0's. Thanks for sharing and looking forward to the next one.
These are things I already know, but I watched the entire video anyway. It is extremely well done and I appreciate the information you give and how you present it. I will be passing this video along to some friends who may want to learn some networking basics. I especially enjoy the structured cabling videos and the problem solving that goes with that aspect. But I look forward to more videos in this series also!
Grate Video. But on that switches you forgot the cable coming from the router. so from 8 ports + 8 ports - 2 ports from 1 switche to another switche you need another port for the roter. so is not 14 port avaliable, it will be 13. 2:34
Ah, but I did that on purpose :). When I cover switches in the second chapter I will explain it more, and more so when I discuss IP addressing. Computers are capable of being networked and communicating between themselves without a router present. The router is there to get you out to the internet and usually is the source of the IP addresses you receive, but it doesn't have to be that way. I'll share in the next chapters how I set up my lab for students and get them to build out a LAN before we get to adding the router.
For a permitted job, you'd need either a C15b, which is a telecom installer license, or you'd want a full C15, which is an electrician's license. For non-permitted, you do you :)
Man, that reminds me of the discussions we had about which topology was best, bus, ring, star or daisy chain network. And the struggle if the terminator was faulty 😁
This is a great source of knowledge for any newbies or those wishing to gain a better understanding of what goes on behind the scenes with those 1's and 0's. Thanks for sharing and looking forward to the next one.
This is like those old-school edutational videos... love it! :-)
Clear, concise and easy to understand.
I'm looking forward for the next video!
These are things I already know, but I watched the entire video anyway. It is extremely well done and I appreciate the information you give and how you present it. I will be passing this video along to some friends who may want to learn some networking basics. I especially enjoy the structured cabling videos and the problem solving that goes with that aspect. But I look forward to more videos in this series also!
I’m very excited to watch this, thanks for posting!
Thank you! I will just use an iPad and draw next time, doing all this animation made it take forever.
The best Networking 101 ever.
Thanks for the video! I've enjoyed your videos on the practical side of things, it's nice to see the theoretical side to go with it
I loved it! The used video materials were well laid out and all your the time spend into visualizing it in easy to follow way -> thanks.
subscribed.. hoping for more content like this in the future
More coming!
Great taste on the Star Trek desk pad. I have one of those on my desk too.
I see you are a person of culture as well :)
You are the best
Grate Video.
But on that switches you forgot the cable coming from the router.
so from 8 ports + 8 ports - 2 ports from 1 switche to another switche you need another port for the roter.
so is not 14 port avaliable, it will be 13. 2:34
Ah, but I did that on purpose :). When I cover switches in the second chapter I will explain it more, and more so when I discuss IP addressing. Computers are capable of being networked and communicating between themselves without a router present. The router is there to get you out to the internet and usually is the source of the IP addresses you receive, but it doesn't have to be that way. I'll share in the next chapters how I set up my lab for students and get them to build out a LAN before we get to adding the router.
Multi purpose device is also referred to as a Gateway. :)
What kind of licensing is involved for running cables within a building (for Hawaii)?
For a permitted job, you'd need either a C15b, which is a telecom installer license, or you'd want a full C15, which is an electrician's license. For non-permitted, you do you :)
Gold.. for newbs… like me..
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