Transcript Document
Course Introduction
Networking Fundamental
Includes material from Cisco Networking Academy CCNA Semester 1
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Course Information
Concepts, Terminology, OSI Model, IP Addressing,
Subnetting, Ethernet, LANs, Protocols, Packets, Frames,
Data Communications
“Survey of Telecommunication and Data communications technology
fundamentals, Local Area Networks, Wide Area Networks, Internet and
internetworking protocols including TCP/IP, network security and
performance, emerging industry trends such as voice over the network
and high speed networking. Designed as a foundation for students who
wish to pursue more advanced telecommunications studies including
certificate programs. Includes hands-on networking labs that incorporate
Cisco CCNA module 1 as a lab component.” (We use CCNA Semester
1 as a lecture component as well.)
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Course Information
Some of the fundamental networking topics covered:
Network Topologies
Transmission media
Coax, twisted pair, fiber
Modulation
Analog transmission
Digital transmission
Line coding
Bandwidth, frequency, amplitude
NICs, Repeaters, Hubs, Switches
ISO and the OSI Model
Cabling, UTP
Collisions domains
Broadcast domains
Binary and Hexadecimal numbers
Ethernet frames
MAC addresses
Token Ring, FDDI
Layer 2 communications
IP Addressing and Subnetting
Classful and Classless addressing
Routers and Routing Protocols
ARP
ICMP
DHCP and DNS
TCP and UDP
This will not be the last time you
learn about these topics in your
networking education and career.
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Where am I?
“What should I already know? I don’t know any of this.”
Perfect, you are in the right class, but you should already
have basic computer literacy knowledge and skills.
Hardware, software, CPU, RAM, ROM, disk drives, interface cards,
bits, bytes, software development,
WWW, email, word processing, windows, file management
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Herding Cats
In some ways, the hardest networking course you will ever
take.
Not because it is difficult, but because:
A lot of new concepts
These concepts become more clear in later courses, after you
have seen them multiple times.
Learning networking is like trying to herd cats. No one great place
to start.
The material this semester will make much more sense in later
semesters. The more you learn about other areas, the more a
certain topic makes sense.
A lot of, “You will learn more about that later.”
A lot of, “Good question, but there is no short answer right now.”
Sometimes, “See me after class and I can explain it.”
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Herding Cats – Posting to TCPmag.com
Q&A: "Please help me with these CCIE questions..."
Scott, Please help me with the following CCIE questions:
1. Define connectivity and inter-operability.
2. What is the purpose of the interframe gap?
3. What is the purpose of the Ethernet type field?
4. Why are terminators needed on Ethernet segments?
5. The first three bytes of the Ethernet packet destination and source
address provide you with what type of management information?
6. How is a jamming signal used?
7. Define the function of a repeater.
8. What is the length and structure of the Version II frame preamble?
9. What is the length and structure of the 802.3 frame preamble?
10. What does a preamble look like when seen in the hexadecimal data
captured in a frame corrupted by a collision?
Thanks. -- Ted Ted,
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Herding Cats – From TCPmag.com
Well, I have to say that you have definitely included the most varied questions in one posting
that I've seen yet! Now, with that in mind, I'm going to take a different approach with the
answer. Each of these questions is vague and can command an answer between one and 15
typed pages at a time. Nobody gives me the space to do that kind of answer!
Each concept is both simple and difficult. Some more specific questions are easily
answered. I would strongly suggest either taking a general networking course or
checking out some good reference books. Examples include: Stevens' TCP/IP
Illustrated, Volume 1; Giles' Cisco CCIE: All-In-One Study Guide; and Halabi's Internet
Routing Architectures (Second Edition). You can also search various Web sites including
http://www.cisco.com; http://www.itprc.com; and http://www.google.com. Each will give
you many results for these topics.
Part of being a networking professional goes far beyond the rote memorization of concepts such
as interframe gap, which may be required by different media types to allow for processing
of frames while still sending an idle code to maintain clocking between the devices. Or that
repeaters do just that -- repeat everything they hear. So, rather than asking question after
question like you've done, spend some time reading and researching those topics. If you
have more specific questions later, that has demonstrated the attempt at understanding the
basic technologies, which admittedly can be very confusing. Then feel free to ask away!
We all are part of a community designed to help each other succeed in many ways, but that
effort for success begins with a personal drive and effort towards learning. I hope this helps
motivate you along that path! And if it doesn't discourage you too much, always remember
that the more you know, the more you know you don't know!
-- Scott CCIE Scott Morris, independent uber-geek, does Cisco training and technology
consulting around the world. He's also a speaker at many industry events. Learn more about
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him at http://smorris.uber-geek.net.
Cisco Online Assessments and Other Info
Cisco Academy Connection: Cisco Online Assessments, Student Community
(http://cisco.netacad.net/)
First Time Login: Username = Academy Connection ID, Password = Temporary Password
Login: Username = username, Password = password (As you entered in the New User
Registration screen
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Student Home
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Student Class
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Assessment &
Gradebook
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Cisco Online Curriculum
UK Petra CNA Server: Cisco Online Curriculum
(http://puslit2.petra.ac.id)
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