Just achieved Sec+ last Friday, so happy about myself. now working hard on CISSP, I had a CCNA 2011 expired 2014 so I know network stuff, but I will save this video. Using pandemic time for self-improvement is the best time investment one can do.
Shout out to the lady at Kennesaw state university who laughed at me when I told her “UA-cam has this information of free.”Instead of paying $2000 for their limited online course. Thanks again lady!
Knowledge is nearly free now, but I'm not sure if it is having the effect on the masses as it has on you (or I). For every single video about a truly scholarly topic, there are ten stupid cat videos, five "challenges" to do things like snorting hot sauce, getting a kick to the gonads, etc; and finally another five for how to apply makeup and paint nails. People are getting dumber and more placated by the time wasting bs. The 1% , the wealthy people have put a gulf between the common people in the past industrial revolution. Now, we have to see that if the capitalist regime makes their money in the age of businesses and then today we can infer that the age of information that has been building over the past few decades is going to result in another 1%. The ones who control the information. If tv was the morphine of the masses after religion stepped back as the standard, then UA-cam and social media is the fentanyl. Do not do drugs
I am after completing Google IT Specialization course and can confirm after 30 minutes that this a great material. I got interested in Networking during Specialization and cannot wait to go through the course. Thank you everyone involved for your effort and time, eternally grateful never ending learner.
@@lyricsandasmr3984 is this video a good resource for the cert? I'm also taking I.T. classes but everything is so condensed that I'm not able to fully absorb it all so I'm looking for more ways to learn it.
@Kingdom Cre8tive No, it won't be. Security cannot be done entirely remotely. ISPs still need to physically connect. You still need to allocate subnetworks. You still need to manage permissions. You still need to manage local computing power for additional optimization and security. Syslog is already a remote monitoring system. Admins need expertise. Not everyone can be a sys admin.
I don't think I can ever properly express my gratitude for the work you guys do and the amount of guidance ya'll provide. Thank you so much, will never stop donating to you guys. ♡
I am in school for this right now, but i have learning disabilities and i have to go over information a ton of times in various ways for it to stick and make sense. I thank you because this is easier for me to understand than my class work.
Same here...I've actually gotten a bachelors degree in Information Technology some years ago and on here for refreshers...there's alot of information to learn and retain for starters..especially if you dont currently work in the field where you are exercising these principles on a daily basis.
This is AWESOME! I studied for the CompTia Network+ exam 4-years ago but life (and later the pandemic) intervened and I missed the opportunity. Now, using this video course as a refresher, I’m going to give it another shot! Thank you!
@@tahntalus No, I haven't yet. I have been building my photography business. I've always kept my Network+ class notes and slides in the cloud, so probably early next year in the spring. I'm still a techie at heart!😊
@@surfbug1 Congratulations! No, but I did take the Security+ exam and passed. I didn't renew my certification when it came time, but I had accomplished my goal.
Great course and refresher! As a long time IT professional who owned a network IT service company for 27yrs and had 32 employees at my max this info is a great refresher for my history.
Hi. I also want to create an IT company, probably in networking. Any tips? Also having 32 employees at your max, I presume your company had a turnover of over 15-20m.
@@McFlashhNo - it was back from late 80's that I took it full time. I had to be extremely competitive with customers like Merrill Lynch. Back than it was more like 5M / yr (in the 90's). Went through Y2k but also the slow down after Y2K. The industry was still in its infancy when I started it and customers typically used Novell. A few used Banyan Vines but that was the exception and only later in the late 90's did we start moving people to Microsoft Server and Exchange. It was a lot of work and ate up my life. It's a massive commitment if you decide to pursue it plus the industry is a lot different today. I worked with Coax Ethernet Cable when I started and there was no wireless. Cell phones were primitive and laptops where a lot bulkier. There was no internet like there is today when I started my company - I had to rely on Bulletin Boards and used first used Hayes 1200B modems and than we moved to 9600B Modems lol. It was only in the 90's that we would start to get easier access to the internet. When I reflect on all of the changes that I've witnessed it really is amazing how far tech has come. My initial introduction into networking was setting up a Novell 2.06a server on a Starlan network. I still have a lot of the equipment I used. We also had to rely on 5.25 Floppy disks and moved to 3.5 1.2meg floppy disks. Hard Drives were 10 or 20MB and we used Lotus 123 for spreadsheets.
Hi, based off your experience, do you think I could use this alone to get certified in comptia or even ccna, or do you think this with a combination of school is necessary?
@@alwayswinning11 has been 2 years, but the question is hanging still so I'm going to answer it. I used a textbook plus videos and practice test onlines to get Sec+ and Linux+ so you shouldn't need school if you prep well enough on publicly available resources. I think Testout has a free trial too for lab simulation. Remember to check out the local library as I have donated some books to mine. Hope you got it. :)
@@brianferrill4951 Is this course fit for those people who has no knowledge about basic networking technology? Can you give proper guideline to start a career in Networking?
@@mdsafiqulislam1652 This isn't quite for people with no knowledge of networking technology. Close but not quite. CompTIA A+ and N+ can help you to get your foot in the door, mostly in a support type position. Although i started supporting small businesses with just those credentials. Even for entry level network engineers it takes more than this. Used to be that getting Cisco's CCNA would get you the entry level network engineer position (or higher). Although I will say that the Cisco exams are some of the hardest that I have taken (but that might have changed since the last time I took them). Now it seems like you need to scout out where you want to work first to see what equipment they use, and then seek out the credentials that go with that equipment (there are differences in the command line interfaces (CLI), but they all seem to be similar. If I was starting out again all over, I would probably focus on getting the skills that A+ and N+ give. Then work as contract support for my local small businesses while i figured out where i wanted to eventually end up. Then focus on getting the certs that would get me in the door there. Also, I recommend looking the security end of things, since that is a pretty hot market right now.
Just finished watching over several days. A great introduction to many networking concepts, thank you! P.S Doing further study, there seems to be some misinformation in the coaxial section. BNC connectors are not obsolete, and are used in thin Ethernet F-type connectors are made out to be better, but they are used mainly in television cable connections Also PPP (Point-to-point protocol) works on layers 1 & 2, not 2 & 3. It call on layer 3 protocols but does not operate at that level. Make sure to get a practice test or additional guide to supplement this video. The video misses out on a lot of detailed information that you will need for questions. All the best peeps!
@jamesesy! Brother! I am going with the video and getting lost time to time. Can you please mention any prerequisite courses or knowledge to get this video properly? Btw, I am not form cs background. I'm just learning on my own.
I love the way Mr. Ferrill approached this course. He explain things so ease and made scene.I'm just now starting my A+ missed type end up here and decided to check it out A week later I completed. I'm taking a break then start again on my A+. Dam this was a couge study. Enjoy Studying every one . Learning Is Awesome.
Basically just reading from the presentation. I‘m at 1h now and fell asleep two times. I came to the comment section too see if this is getting any better
This is really good. He gives the right amount of info in a concise way. Perfect voice and enunciation so it's very easy to understand what he is saying. The chapters make it easy to review without hunting through the entire video.
love this ...will do a retraining here in Germany soon. I'am 38 and completly in love with it. I listen/hand write everything/look ups things i wanna dive deeper in/read my writing again. It does stick and i am very thankful for this !
Hi pace IT , I have just completed learning CCNA and iam currently preparing to the exam. This whole video content has greatly hepled in understanding networking which would helps me in facing CCNA exam
At 21:17 timestamp, the instructor said TLS uses assymetrical cryptography to "authenticate" (i.e. verify identity of communicating parties). That's true. TLS also uses symmetrical cryptography for "confidentiality"( i.e. protects the exchanged data from unauthorized access)... Hope this helps
this is a better listening tool while working, actually. at least you get to refresh on old things you knew while also getting to know things you missed out on while getting new insights on the side, while working
I'm so late seeing this video, but I'd say this is a pure gold of learnings for everyone. May the heaven blessed the author/creator of this video. AWESOME WORK!
its the same amount of people who go burn cities because they claim that their feelings are hurt and everybody is out there to "get them" you never pay attention to those idiots.
I'm only 3 minutes in and not only have I learned something new, I really appreciate Brian's voice here. So many videos like this are narrated by someone whose voice puts me to sleep. This guy has got me wanting to know more. Thanks for this!
for clarification, this video is for the N10-006 version of the exam. the current version is the n10-007, and will be completely replaced by the n10-008 by next summer. it's still very informative, but just be aware it's not exactly the entire picture if you are using this to study for the current network+ exam.
In my personal opinion, this video would be even more effective if there were small quizzes at the end of each segment of concepts discussed. Informative videos that are combined with interactive activity are the best.
2:15:40 a small criticism of my part, it would be interesting to speak of the number of nodes available instead of the actual IP limits, or have them show in a more graphical way too, the constant repetition of numbers one after the other makes for a confusing lecture
I've gone through the entire video, making a hierarchical note set of 76 searchable pages of all the content herein. There is a multitude of information on the Network+ exam that is not even mentioned in this course. This may not be an entire waste of time, as it gives you some definitional foundation, but there is not nearly enough "how" and "why" information (there is almost none) in this course to even begin to understand concepts or be prepared for any networking job or Network+ exam.
@@LarsVonHired He's not bragging or moaning... He's informing people that there is so much involved than the video lets on. I agree with him and I don't think that warrants anything worth proving... If you took a real and acreddited Networking course, you'd definitely agree. Heck, even a 12-week course fails to viably explain the what and why behind the many intricate details of the OSI model.
@@yandelyano To be a advanced hacker,With Other skills, Networking is very important . and impo... for other some jobs like - "networking administrator " .
Can you also make college level courses on 1.operating system 2. computer organization and architecture Because questions are asked on topics from these subjects too. And we don't want to study it in detail. Just college level
In the interim, try: 1. Operating system - Refer to Udacity's operating system course 2. Computer Organization - Coursera has one, but it is slightly more advanced. Try Morris Mano, it's pretty basic too.
For college level Operating System - Gate Smashers is Best Computer Org and Arch - Any Gate Preparation channel you feel comfortable with. For any college level subject preparation, GATE Preparation channels are best. My personal favorite is Gate Smashers
@@rs95Opbr I accept, freecodecamp is a lifesaver, I hope this 9 hour video has almost every basic topic I need, UA-cam recommendations are getting pretty neat.
This video is not for complete beginners. Its better to read articles like geeks for geeks and java point. He is just reading from the presentation and not expainin anything. and included billions of ads in it. Although its good for recalling. 🙂
This material was originally created as supplemental material for Edmonds Community College's PACE-IT program. So it is light on in-depth explanation. The original intent was not to be completely stand-alone
@@GamerWolfLp There are many channels with similar content in Chinese, Hindi and Spanish the other top spoken languages. But I agree hopefully this type of content can be exported to everyone out there.👍
Please upload videos about DEVOPS. I really appreciate your effort of making this video and educating lot of people around the world. Thank you so much. Love from INDIA ❤❤❤
@@yandelyano According to me, knowing networking would help in laying a strong foundation in CSE along with Data structures, OOP and DBMS, of course. I am a non CSE person and thus, was looking forward to this course.
Thank you for your advice. I am in need of help to point out a scam from the internet providers. If you have studied fiber optics or coaxial cable you know that the about of frequencies they carry is not based on size. Internet service providers are putting up cables that are 3 inches around and four runs of this going one way. At this stage of the internet the hardware is routing the packets to the receiving computer. The size of the cable has nothing to do with data transfer. We should not be paying more than $35 for internet, phone and cable!
for anyone watching this during quarantine; Congratulations on wanting to improve yourself,and wish you the best in your future endeavors
.
Thanks a lot bro, you too!
Damn. You too sir!
Thank you !!!!
Just achieved Sec+ last Friday, so happy about myself. now working hard on CISSP, I had a CCNA 2011 expired 2014 so I know network stuff, but I will save this video. Using pandemic time for self-improvement is the best time investment one can do.
To bad I will lose my house and starve to death before I can utilise these skills.
Shout out to the lady at Kennesaw state university who laughed at me when I told her “UA-cam has this information of free.”Instead of paying $2000 for their limited online course. Thanks again lady!
Its a revolution. Knowledge for all
I strongly believe Capitalism should respectfully stay away from Education, healthcare, and basic foods.
For*
But yes I agree
Knowledge is nearly free now, but I'm not sure if it is having the effect on the masses as it has on you (or I). For every single video about a truly scholarly topic, there are ten stupid cat videos, five "challenges" to do things like snorting hot sauce, getting a kick to the gonads, etc; and finally another five for how to apply makeup and paint nails. People are getting dumber and more placated by the time wasting bs. The 1% , the wealthy people have put a gulf between the common people in the past industrial revolution. Now, we have to see that if the capitalist regime makes their money in the age of businesses and then today we can infer that the age of information that has been building over the past few decades is going to result in another 1%. The ones who control the information. If tv was the morphine of the masses after religion stepped back as the standard, then UA-cam and social media is the fentanyl. Do not do drugs
This Chanel is literally a blessing
A university
@@thebeerministry 🤣🤣🤣. UGC and AICTE should start recognising these degrees
Right?
true
This comment made me subscribe
For anyone watching this now in the year 2024 to learn about Cloud/Devops engineering Goodluck to you
thank you i'm gonna start it today :)
is this enough fofr devOps?
Did you have to go through all 9hrs? Or there's parts you can skip
@@xyzadmin123 No it's not...but it will get you started
@@SherifdeenOluyemo just watch everything and learn.
Knowledge is free and must remain free
Thanks to these brave scientists of this channel
it should be a global amendment .
@@ronsreacts cant. business reasons
Las cosas gratis son de comunistas. Jajajaja
www.youtube.com/@computernetworking9
brave?
Course Contents ⭐️
⌨️ (0:00:00) Intro to Network Devices (part 1)
⌨️ (0:07:24) Intro to Network Devices (part 2)
⌨️ (0:15:12) Networking Services and Applications (part 1)
⌨️ (0:22:49) Networking Services and Applications (part 2)
⌨️ (0:28:17) DHCP in the Network
⌨️ (0:38:03) Introduction to the DNS Service
⌨️ (0:46:01) Introducing Network Address Translation
⌨️ (0:52:52) WAN Technologies (part 1)
⌨️ (1:03:02) WAN Technologies (part 2)
⌨️ (1:09:32) WAN Technologies (part 3)
⌨️ (1:17:20) WAN Technologies (part 4)
⌨️ (1:22:32) Network Cabling (part 1)
⌨️ (1:31:24) Network Cabling (part 2)
⌨️ (1:38:15) Network Cabling (part 3)
⌨️ (1:43:28) Network Topologies
⌨️ (1:50:29) Network Infrastructure Implementations
⌨️ (1:56:26) Introduction to IPv4 (part 1)
⌨️ (2:02:42) Introduction to IPv4 (part 2)
⌨️ (2:15:58) Introduction to IPv6
⌨️ (2:26:10) Special IP Networking Concepts
⌨️ (2:34:06) Introduction to Routing Concepts (part 1)
⌨️ (2:40:00) Introduction to Routing Concepts (part 2)
⌨️ (2:49:29) Introduction to Routing Protocols
⌨️ (2:59:01) Basic Elements of Unified Communications
⌨️ (3:04:27) Virtualization Technologies
⌨️ (3:09:24) Storage Area Networks
⌨️ (3:15:33) Basic Cloud Concepts
⌨️ (3:21:43) Implementing a Basic Network
⌨️ (3:31:02) Analyzing Monitoring Reports
⌨️ (3:40:03) Network Monitoring (part 1)
⌨️ (3:48:14) Network Monitoring (part 2)
⌨️ (3:55:10) Supporting Configuration Management (part 1)
⌨️ (4:01:52) Supporting Configuration Management (part 2)
⌨️ (4:07:19) The Importance of Network Segmentation
⌨️ (4:14:18) Applying Patches and Updates
⌨️ (4:19:52) Configuring Switches (part 1)
⌨️ (4:26:39) Configuring Switches (part 2)
⌨️ (4:36:27) Wireless LAN Infrastructure (part 1)
⌨️ (4:46:42) Wireless LAN Infrastructure (part 2)
⌨️ (4:53:17) Risk and Security Related Concepts
⌨️ (5:00:46) Common Network Vulnerabilities
⌨️ (5:09:49) Common Network Threats (part 1)
⌨️ (5:17:13) Common Network Threats (part 2)
⌨️ (5:26:33) Network Hardening Techniques (part 1)
⌨️ (5:36:00) Network Hardening Techniques (part 2)
⌨️ (5:44:40) Network Hardening Techniques (part 3)
⌨️ (5:50:58) Physical Network Security Control
⌨️ (5:57:19) Firewall Basics
⌨️ (6:06:53) Network Access Control
⌨️ (6:13:22) Basic Forensic Concepts
⌨️ (6:22:42) Network Troubleshooting Methodology
⌨️ (6:29:18) Troubleshooting Connectivity with Utilities
⌨️ (6:36:32) Troubleshooting Connectivity with Hardware
⌨️ (6:43:39) Troubleshooting Wireless Networks (part 1)
⌨️ (6:50:56) Troubleshooting Wireless Networks (part 2)
⌨️ (6:57:27) Troubleshooting Copper Wire Networks (part 1)
⌨️ (7:03:49) Troubleshooting Copper Wire Networks (part 2)
⌨️ (7:09:19) Troubleshooting Fiber Cable Networks
⌨️ (7:14:43) Network Troubleshooting Common Network Issues
⌨️ (7:24:40) Common Network Security Issues
⌨️ (7:35:12) Common WAN Components and Issues
⌨️ (7:43:33) The OSI Networking Reference Model
⌨️ (7:51:50) The Transport Layer Plus ICMP
⌨️ (7:58:35) Basic Network Concepts (part 1)
⌨️ (8:05:33) Basic Network Concepts (part 2)
⌨️ (8:12:29) Basic Network Concepts (part 3)
⌨️ (8:17:42) Introduction to Wireless Network Standards
⌨️ (8:24:26) Introduction to Wired Network Standards
⌨️ (8:32:41) Security Policies and other Documents
⌨️ (8:40:08) Introduction to Safety Practices (part 1)
⌨️ (8:48:34) Introduction to Safety Practices (part 2)
⌨️ (8:54:26) Rack and Power Management
⌨️ (9:00:25) Cable Management
⌨️ (9:05:56) Basics of Change Management
⌨️ (9:12:11) Common Networking Protocols (part 1)
⌨️ (9:18:06) Common Networking Protocols (part 2)
For Mobile users ...... Thank me later ..... LOL
You are great
no one can do that lol jk
Not all heroes wear capes
Careful, he's a Hero
Thanks
I am after completing Google IT Specialization course and can confirm after 30 minutes that this a great material. I got interested in Networking during Specialization and cannot wait to go through the course. Thank you everyone involved for your effort and time, eternally grateful never ending learner.
I just finished my Google IT Specialization Cert 2 weeks ago as well. Did you ever finish this video and take the exam?
@@lyricsandasmr3984, I finished the video, but didn't take the exam :)
@@lyricsandasmr3984 is this video a good resource for the cert? I'm also taking I.T. classes but everything is so condensed that I'm not able to fully absorb it all so I'm looking for more ways to learn it.
the one offered on Coursera? Google IT Fundamental Cert?
Google IT cert 😂😂😂😂😂😂 I’m dead
I do factory work and listen to your lesosons on my 12 hour shifts. Absolutely love it!!
well done bro
@@Mimif-Twistedstill factory work
Same
Much respect to you from a Korean guy
I have learned more in 9 minutes than I have learned in 3 weeks in my current networking class.
Bro facts
Hi do you think I could use this alone to get certified in comptia or even ccna, or do you think this with a combination of school is necessary?
@Kingdom Cre8tive No, it won't be. Security cannot be done entirely remotely. ISPs still need to physically connect. You still need to allocate subnetworks. You still need to manage permissions. You still need to manage local computing power for additional optimization and security. Syslog is already a remote monitoring system. Admins need expertise. Not everyone can be a sys admin.
Hopefully you learned to start to pay attention in your classes.
😂😂😂😂😂😂
I don't think I can ever properly express my gratitude for the work you guys do and the amount of guidance ya'll provide. Thank you so much, will never stop donating to you guys. ♡
I am in school for this right now, but i have learning disabilities and i have to go over information a ton of times in various ways for it to stick and make sense. I thank you because this is easier for me to understand than my class work.
How did you find out you have learning disabilities
do well!
@@sanjithvikram6787 thank you for your kind words, I now have my A+ cert.
@@Shebrew144 That's great! Keep Rocking! :)
Same here...I've actually gotten a bachelors degree in Information Technology some years ago and on here for refreshers...there's alot of information to learn and retain for starters..especially if you dont currently work in the field where you are exercising these principles on a daily basis.
This is AWESOME! I studied for the CompTia Network+ exam 4-years ago but life (and later the pandemic) intervened and I missed the opportunity. Now, using this video course as a refresher, I’m going to give it another shot! Thank you!
Did you take the exam? How did you do?
@@tahntalus No, I haven't yet. I have been building my photography business. I've always kept my Network+ class notes and slides in the cloud, so probably early next year in the spring. I'm still a techie at heart!😊
@@deewonda1952 If you like to brainstorm or ask questions, maybe I can help. I am also gonna refresh things in IT.
Did you take the test? I'm taking it today 5.14.2023 CompTIA network +
@@surfbug1 Congratulations! No, but I did take the Security+ exam and passed. I didn't renew my certification when it came time, but I had accomplished my goal.
Great course and refresher! As a long time IT professional who owned a network IT service company for 27yrs and had 32 employees at my max this info is a great refresher for my history.
really?
Bro iv been watching this for over 2 hours and I haven't learned that much I feel dumb.
Hi. I also want to create an IT company, probably in networking. Any tips? Also having 32 employees at your max, I presume your company had a turnover of over 15-20m.
@@whyulookedatherebro7385 yes
@@McFlashhNo - it was back from late 80's that I took it full time. I had to be extremely competitive with customers like Merrill Lynch. Back than it was more like 5M / yr (in the 90's). Went through Y2k but also the slow down after Y2K. The industry was still in its infancy when I started it and customers typically used Novell. A few used Banyan Vines but that was the exception and only later in the late 90's did we start moving people to Microsoft Server and Exchange. It was a lot of work and ate up my life. It's a massive commitment if you decide to pursue it plus the industry is a lot different today. I worked with Coax Ethernet Cable when I started and there was no wireless. Cell phones were primitive and laptops where a lot bulkier. There was no internet like there is today when I started my company - I had to rely on Bulletin Boards and used first used Hayes 1200B modems and than we moved to 9600B Modems lol. It was only in the 90's that we would start to get easier access to the internet. When I reflect on all of the changes that I've witnessed it really is amazing how far tech has come. My initial introduction into networking was setting up a Novell 2.06a server on a Starlan network. I still have a lot of the equipment I used. We also had to rely on 5.25 Floppy disks and moved to 3.5 1.2meg floppy disks. Hard Drives were 10 or 20MB and we used Lotus 123 for spreadsheets.
I took the whole trimester for only one unit (Networking). Here is only 9 hrs and it is absolute direct 2 the point. Be bless indeed!
Hi, based off your experience, do you think I could use this alone to get certified in comptia or even ccna, or do you think this with a combination of school is necessary?
@@alwayswinning11 has been 2 years, but the question is hanging still so I'm going to answer it. I used a textbook plus videos and practice test onlines to get Sec+ and Linux+ so you shouldn't need school if you prep well enough on publicly available resources. I think Testout has a free trial too for lab simulation. Remember to check out the local library as I have donated some books to mine. Hope you got it. :)
I don't even need to watch the whole thing, I just upvote because I can't believe they made it available. FCC for life!
Right....
I originally created this material for Edmond's Community College's PACE-IT program, it was always intended to be open source.
@@brianferrill4951 Is this course fit for those people who has no knowledge about basic networking technology?
Can you give proper guideline to start a career in Networking?
@@mdsafiqulislam1652 This isn't quite for people with no knowledge of networking technology. Close but not quite. CompTIA A+ and N+ can help you to get your foot in the door, mostly in a support type position. Although i started supporting small businesses with just those credentials. Even for entry level network engineers it takes more than this. Used to be that getting Cisco's CCNA would get you the entry level network engineer position (or higher). Although I will say that the Cisco exams are some of the hardest that I have taken (but that might have changed since the last time I took them). Now it seems like you need to scout out where you want to work first to see what equipment they use, and then seek out the credentials that go with that equipment (there are differences in the command line interfaces (CLI), but they all seem to be similar.
If I was starting out again all over, I would probably focus on getting the skills that A+ and N+ give. Then work as contract support for my local small businesses while i figured out where i wanted to eventually end up. Then focus on getting the certs that would get me in the door there.
Also, I recommend looking the security end of things, since that is a pretty hot market right now.
Whats FCC
I cannot thank freeCodeCamp enough for all of these videos. Much gratitude to all the teachers and contributors.
Just finished watching over several days. A great introduction to many networking concepts, thank you!
P.S Doing further study, there seems to be some misinformation in the coaxial section.
BNC connectors are not obsolete, and are used in thin Ethernet
F-type connectors are made out to be better, but they are used mainly in television cable connections
Also
PPP (Point-to-point protocol) works on layers 1 & 2, not 2 & 3. It call on layer 3 protocols but does not operate at that level.
Make sure to get a practice test or additional guide to supplement this video. The video misses out on a lot of detailed information that you will need for questions. All the best peeps!
@jamesesy!
Brother! I am going with the video and getting lost time to time. Can you please mention any prerequisite courses or knowledge to get this video properly?
Btw, I am not form cs background. I'm just learning on my own.
@@mohaimenulimam233 learn comptia a+ network before network+
Fr
layer 1 is physical. It absolutely does not operate on layer 1.
I love the way Mr. Ferrill approached this course. He explain things so ease and made scene.I'm just now starting my A+ missed type end up here and decided to check it out A week later I completed. I'm taking a break then start again on my A+. Dam this was a couge study.
Enjoy Studying every one .
Learning Is Awesome.
Basically just reading from the presentation. I‘m at 1h now and fell asleep two times. I came to the comment section too see if this is getting any better
This is really good. He gives the right amount of info in a concise way. Perfect voice and enunciation so it's very easy to understand what he is saying. The chapters make it easy to review without hunting through the entire video.
Bless this people thank you all who contributed to this youtube channel
had my exam couple of moths back, got a C, and now free code camp releases a computer networking! wish it was earlier.
Beautiful course and many thankful words to Brian Ferill for his efforts to give us possibility to learn network in a very easy and blessing
manner
Thank you. I'll be watching an hour a day from today.
It's a complete revision of the course I did in campus.
love this ...will do a retraining here in Germany soon. I'am 38 and completly in love with it. I listen/hand write everything/look ups things i wanna dive deeper in/read my writing again. It does stick and i am very thankful for this !
the only way i can express my thanks to you guys is by watching all the ads no skipping
I’m only 12 mins in and wow!!! Why didn’t I know of this channel before?? This is a golden treasure 🔥
Hi pace IT , I have just completed learning CCNA and iam currently preparing to the exam. This whole video content has greatly hepled in understanding networking which would helps me in facing CCNA exam
Hi brother which exam this course helps
Hello, did it turn out helpful for ccna?
Thank you for this. I'm in a Network+ based College course right now and I'm sure this is going to be a big help.
how was it
Let link up
At 21:17 timestamp, the instructor said TLS uses assymetrical cryptography to "authenticate" (i.e. verify identity of communicating parties). That's true.
TLS also uses symmetrical cryptography for "confidentiality"( i.e. protects the exchanged data from unauthorized access)... Hope this helps
this is a better listening tool while working, actually. at least you get to refresh on old things you knew while also getting to know things you missed out on while getting new insights on the side, while working
Thank you for providing this comprehensive collection of series. Extremely professional in arrangement and delivery. I am overflowing with gratitude.
It's 10 hour long , thankyou very much for providing free content ,
🙏JAI SHRI RAM🙏
JAI SHRI RAM.
I'm so late seeing this video, but I'd say this is a pure gold of learnings for everyone. May the heaven blessed the author/creator of this video. AWESOME WORK!
This is literally the second video I clicked and I'm already in love to the channel
So this course video is 9 hours, has just been uploaded 18 mins ago and 3 people already disliked it?
Some people want to watch the world burn tbh!
They probably saw the yellow labels representing ads. This video has like 20 ads. That is garbage tbh.
@@romanmueller3479 I mean this is a free educational video for 9 hours. Why don't people appreciate this fact tho
I thought the same
@@romanmueller3479 thats where adblocker comes into picture
its the same amount of people who go burn cities because they claim that their feelings are hurt and everybody is out there to "get them"
you never pay attention to those idiots.
9 hours. wow. it's a hard work to choose, talk and glue everything together. thanks.
I'm studying for my CCNA but this is very helpful still. Thanks so much
Did this help for ccna ?
you get the ccna
?
this course helped me to pass my computer engineering exam in computer networking
I'm only 3 minutes in and not only have I learned something new, I really appreciate Brian's voice here. So many videos like this are narrated by someone whose voice puts me to sleep. This guy has got me wanting to know more. Thanks for this!
Thank you,
@@brianferrill4951 brian flakes
Literally the bible of computer networking. Thank you freeCodeCamp, and thank you Brian Ferrill!
for clarification, this video is for the N10-006 version of the exam. the current version is the n10-007, and will be completely replaced by the n10-008 by next summer. it's still very informative, but just be aware it's not exactly the entire picture if you are using this to study for the current network+ exam.
appreciate u bro, just saved 9 hours of my life
This course is needed for even the A+ exam. There is soo much overlay covered there.
I use to go to EDCC - I worked in the computer lab there with Don Ullom. I'm sure he's not there anymore but he was a wonderful guy,
From Brazil: Thank YOU VERY MUCH for this wonderful course !!!!!!!
The most glorious video in the history of mankind. Screw a playlist...
Every time FCC uploads a video, I am just jammed in front of PC. Guys your content are awesome. God bless you all.
This is how info is supposed to be shared. We are truly blessed today. There was a time when only societal elites had knowledge.
How you could dislike such a video? it covers more than enough. Great work!
It’s the nasal voice for me
I didn't dislike it, but I think it's too dry and monotonous way of teaching. The content is brilliant, but could have been delivered way better.
@@leishmaniaful just watch it on 1.25 or 1.5 speed
@@reviwedandtranslated4416 1.25 sounds the most natural
Security Devices: Firewall, IDS, IPS, VPN Concentrator
Optimization and Performance Devices: Load balancer, Proxy Server,
Thanks!
I came straight for the networking tools & networking resolutions.
Thanks so much!!
In my personal opinion, this video would be even more effective if there were small quizzes at the end of each segment of concepts discussed. Informative videos that are combined with interactive activity are the best.
This material was created as supplemental material for an existing course in Edmonds Community College's PACE-IT program. So, sorry no quizzes.
@@brianferrill4951 brian flakes
@@brianferrill4951 asswipe
watching these videos is the best self-investment. thank you freecode camp.
Brill. One of the most comprehensive Networking courses on UA-cam 👌
This is the best computer channel
2:15:40 a small criticism of my part, it would be interesting to speak of the number of nodes available instead of the actual IP limits, or have them show in a more graphical way too, the constant repetition of numbers one after the other makes for a confusing lecture
This channel is best youtube channel of my life👌👌👌
I can never thank this channel enough
Thank you so much for your time, your generosity and kindness!
Thank you Brian, I have watched the tutorial twice, well taught and amazing tutorial
You're welcome
@@brianferrill4951 such a wonderful course, can't thank you enough
Can u please tell where I can find the slides or any similar book where I can read it again
@@brianferrill4951 brian flakes
Essentially what I've learned from this is -- all the increasingly common breaches are actually just gross negligence, and everyone knows it
I've gone through the entire video, making a hierarchical note set of 76 searchable pages of all the content herein. There is a multitude of information on the Network+ exam that is not even mentioned in this course. This may not be an entire waste of time, as it gives you some definitional foundation, but there is not nearly enough "how" and "why" information (there is almost none) in this course to even begin to understand concepts or be prepared for any networking job or Network+ exam.
Yeah, I feep for those who take these as an all-encompassing source of knowledge. These videos are supplemental references to primers, at best.
Sure you have buddy, if you did you'd share it rather than just brag about it and then moan about the video in the same comment. Try again!
@@LarsVonHired He's not bragging or moaning... He's informing people that there is so much involved than the video lets on. I agree with him and I don't think that warrants anything worth proving... If you took a real and acreddited Networking course, you'd definitely agree. Heck, even a 12-week course fails to viably explain the what and why behind the many intricate details of the OSI model.
His voice is the most calming voice I've ever heard.
😍😍😍The course I was waiting for, that course has arrived today after several months.woww !! ,😍😘😘😘😘😘😘😘😘😘😘😘
What are some concrete advantages of taking this course ?
Is this from complete basics
@@yandelyano To be a advanced hacker,With Other skills, Networking is very important . and impo... for other some jobs like - "networking administrator " .
@@sendhur_muthu Yes sir
@@Google_Engineer This is not a hacking related course...
Thank you Mr. Ferrill for all you have taught the world
And ... I discovered this channel
A love story just began
This chanel is god given gift 🎁 😍 🎉 Kindly make use of it....
I am really enjoying this tutorial, it is packed full of information and very helpful, thank you very much 👍 👏 👏 👍
This is top 5 channels on UA-cam🔥
Can you also make college level courses on
1.operating system
2. computer organization and architecture
Because questions are asked on topics from these subjects too.
And we don't want to study it in detail. Just college level
In the interim, try:
1. Operating system - Refer to Udacity's operating system course
2. Computer Organization - Coursera has one, but it is slightly more advanced. Try Morris Mano, it's pretty basic too.
try The Software/Hardware Interface on coursera for computer organisation.
For college level
Operating System - Gate Smashers is Best
Computer Org and Arch - Any Gate Preparation channel you feel comfortable with.
For any college level subject preparation, GATE Preparation channels are best.
My personal favorite is Gate Smashers
@@565yogesh name is khadar
It's a great content for me to study network engineering by self.
The exam was hard, I wish I watched this video. Nice video very informative.
Informational discrepancy in this presentation regarding 802.11 standards @ 6:55:27 and @ 8:22:00
Thank god... I really need this course cause i didn't get anything in online lectures 😫🤓
This is online too stoopid
@@geridashja3270 He might be referring to his university online lectures.
@@madhoshyagnik3679 no other lectures are good but computer network subject is hard to understand me
@@geridashja3270 which one you referring to universitys lectures or freecodecamps lectures
@@rs95Opbr I accept, freecodecamp is a lifesaver, I hope this 9 hour video has almost every basic topic I need, UA-cam recommendations are getting pretty neat.
Thank you guys for making education free and available God bless
I have been hoping for a computer networking course from you, since I'm doing networking in uni right now. So happy that it came out :D
Job interview this month just freshing up the shizzle, junior security auditor..... ✌️Thanks for the vid
Computer Networks is also a prereq if you want to learn cyber security
This channel is a gift from god
Ideal for IT, DevOps and network engineers
What exactly is DevOps? I’ve seen it alot and researched it but I’m still a bit confused on what they do
This channel is crazy for every right reason!
Another amazing project. Congratulations folks!
Ju9
I have a job interview for a position I'm not super qualified for so I'm just gonna become qualified. Thank you for this course.
This video is not for complete beginners. Its better to read articles like geeks for geeks and java point.
He is just reading from the presentation and not expainin anything. and included billions of ads in it. Although its good for recalling. 🙂
yeah i also felt like that.
This material was originally created as supplemental material for Edmonds Community College's PACE-IT program. So it is light on in-depth explanation. The original intent was not to be completely stand-alone
Thank you for this channel. Thanks Mike of Giraffe Academy, Professor Ferrill, and other lecturers I'm about to discover. What a goldmine.
This is how classic schools are becoming irrelevant.
Thank you for the knowledge!
Unfortunately just for people who can understand English :/
@@GamerWolfLp There are many channels with similar content in Chinese, Hindi and Spanish the other top spoken languages. But I agree hopefully this type of content can be exported to everyone out there.👍
@@mr.castle there are not so many in spanish, at least not like this nor mit opencourseware
Just searched everywhere for network course thanks for uploading!!!
I waited too long thank you. I need this course.
U deserve this this by far the best course I have ever seen and its a humble opinion these words doesn't do u right thank you sir❤
Beautiful! And with subtitles! I can't thank you enough!
Please upload videos about DEVOPS. I really appreciate your effort of making this video and educating lot of people around the world. Thank you so much. Love from INDIA ❤❤❤
Was eagerly waiting for this!
What could be some concrete applications to taking this course ?
@@yandelyano According to me, knowing networking would help in laying a strong foundation in CSE along with Data structures, OOP and DBMS, of course. I am a non CSE person and thus, was looking forward to this course.
Thank you very much. Love from South Africa and eagerly looking forward to starting and completing this
Thank you for your advice. I am in need of help to point out a scam from the internet providers. If you have studied fiber optics or coaxial cable you know that the about of frequencies they carry is not based on size. Internet service providers are putting up cables that are 3 inches around and four runs of this going one way. At this stage of the internet the hardware is routing the packets to the receiving computer. The size of the cable has nothing to do with data transfer. We should not be paying more than $35 for internet, phone and cable!
great resousce for the ones who cannot read the documents already exist on the web
I always appreciate what you guys do. Thanks!
I love the internet... Basically you can learn whatever you want...
This is one of the best course videos I have seen on Computer Networking. Can I get the slides used in this video for future reference.
I listen to this while at work then watch it again when I get home to take detailed notes.
i really really needed this one. Thanks, FCC! Take Love :)
Check Jeremy's it lab. The person is a wonderful teacher and following Wendell Odom. You won't regret. That is the best channel