This video is an absolute blessing! I've been trying, for two days, to figure out how to correctly iterate through all of the addresses. Thank you so much.
One of the best and easy to follow tutorial for subnetting… once you get familiar with this method, you can ditch the binary visulization..KISS (Keep It Simple, Stupid…. This guy has just kissed every body)🙂
i guess one can't go simplier than this. the other videos in subnetting using this approach are a lot less complicated compared to others and if you will combine them all, subnetting will be less difficult. thanks for sharing.
can you make a video which that subnet applies to physical connection like the subnet configured to the router and host ip configured to the (host) computers or devices. i mean in actual infra setup. thanks and more power
Wondered the same thing. It's clear the three bits are borrowed from the last/fourth octet, but why? That little gap would be helpful to have explained.
Question: You stated that the network doesn't change. I see this 192.168.0.0 then I see 192.168.1.0 then 192.168.2.0... Why does the 3rd Octect change in Class C? I'm confused... This is where I'm in my understanding of Ip is weak. Thank u.
hi, thank god i understood that in ip, but still some things can be confusing.. so basically the .1 or .2 can be considered as host portion and they change with every other host, unlike network portion
This video is an absolute blessing! I've been trying, for two days, to figure out how to correctly iterate through all of the addresses. Thank you so much.
you are better than many teachers thanks
Simplicity is a beautiful thing! Thanks.
One of the best and easy to follow tutorial for subnetting… once you get familiar with this method, you can ditch the binary visulization..KISS (Keep It Simple, Stupid…. This guy has just kissed every body)🙂
Excellence teacher ,thank you so much,just i have seen more your tutorials,its wow!,with excellence explanations!,and great concept ..
I was very interested. Thank you.
love this, it really was helpful
i guess one can't go simplier than this. the other videos in subnetting using this approach are a lot less complicated compared to others and if you will combine them all, subnetting will be less difficult. thanks for sharing.
Very helpful sir!! Thanks a lot!
Thanks a lot God bless you sir
I failed my CCNA, can i have access you all Boost CCNA Videos? you look great teacher never look other video better then this
Thanks so much 🙏
how do we know its /27 ?
Actually this is only for special cases where you need a classful network. As CIDR is the standard, things are way easier :)
can you make a video which that subnet applies to physical connection like the subnet configured to the router and host ip configured to the (host) computers or devices. i mean in actual infra setup. thanks and more power
We're did you get the 27?
Nice one
Where did you get /27 24 network bits
Where’s 224 coming from it’s 16cidr im so close im just missing a few things
very helpful
where the /27 come from ?
It's 3 bit subnetting ....so it has 24 bit net I'd n 8 bit host id in class c ....so it take 3 bits fr 24 bit net I'd .....so it's /27
tnks
Why doesnt i catch this topic.
how did you get /27 for the first subnet CIDR?
Wondered the same thing. It's clear the three bits are borrowed from the last/fourth octet, but why? That little gap would be helpful to have explained.
he provided the Subnet Mask 255.255.255.224 which is equivalent to /27
@Steve Wilder have we stolen whole of third octet for class B. If yes then can we change.
128+64+32=224 Class C = 24+3=27
same question
Question: You stated that the network doesn't change. I see this 192.168.0.0 then I see 192.168.1.0 then 192.168.2.0... Why does the 3rd Octect change in Class C? I'm confused... This is where I'm in my understanding of Ip is weak. Thank u.
It's not class C. It's class B
That is because of vlsm.
Then second example is a Class B network and not C
hi, thank god i understood that in ip, but still some things can be confusing.. so basically the .1 or .2 can be considered as host portion and they change with every other host, unlike network portion
No need for that "subnet multiple formula"... the number of hosts per subnet IS the subnet multiple
Why slash 27 used?
to indicate total number of network bits
@@manjitbaishya3996 thanks
How to find 224?
Its clear but how did he get the /27
Number of bits used
@@mathiaspettersson4069 thanks man
Ok please the formula of subnet mask
but how can you use /27 while yuo are in class B ?