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CCNA Routing and Switching 200-125 Certification Guide

You're reading from   CCNA Routing and Switching 200-125 Certification Guide The ultimate solution for passing the CCNA certification and boosting your networking career

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787127883
Length 504 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Lazaro (Laz) Diaz Lazaro (Laz) Diaz
Author Profile Icon Lazaro (Laz) Diaz
Lazaro (Laz) Diaz
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Toc

Table of Contents (24) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Internetworking Models FREE CHAPTER 2. Ethernet Networking and Data Encapsulations 3. Introducing the TCP/IP 4. Subnetting in IPv4 5. Variable Length Subnet Mask and Route Summarization 6. The IOS User Interface 7. Managing the Cisco Internetwork 8. Managing Cisco Devices 9. The IP Routing Process 10. The IPv6 Protocol 11. Introduction to IPv6 Routing 12. Switching Services and Configurations 13. VLANs and Inter-VLAN Routing 14. Introduction to the EIGRP Routing Protocol 15. The World of Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) 16. Border Gateway Protocol 17. Access-Control List 18. Network Address Translation 19. Wide Area Networks 20. Advanced Networking Topics 21. Mock Test Questions
22. Assessments
23. Other Books You May Enjoy

The evolution of networks

To be a professional network engineer, you need to know the differences between internet-working devices, such as repeaters, hubs, bridges, switches, and routers.

In the dawn of networks, we used a topology called a bus, which was simply one main cable, usually a coaxial cable, that every other node was connected to using vampire taps, and the PCs used NIC cards that had BNC connectors.

These networks served their purpose at the time when bus topologies and coaxial cable were used for networking, but it was extremely slow, and if there was a break in any part of the cable, the entire network would be down. That means no one could send or receive any information. Why? Because the broken part of the cable would send signals back onto the network called reflection, and all computers would hear noise on the network and not transmit.

But it did not have to...

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