Home| All soft| Last soft| Your Orders| Customers opinion| Helpdesk| Cart

Program Search:


Shopping Cart:




*Note: Minimum order price: €20
We Recommend:

Udemy The Complete Networking Fundamentals Course Your CCNA start €20 buy download

2016
Udemy
17:03:47
English

Welcome to the Complete Network Fundamentals Course! In this course, you will learn the technologies that keep the world as you know today connected and running.
Networks are all around us and you are using one right now to access this course.
Imagine for a moment, how different your life would be without access to Facebook, Snapchat, Google, YouTube, Whatsapp or any of the other websites on the Internet? How would you live with no Internet?
The Internet is extremely important in modern life today and all websites and Internet communication relies on networking. This reliance is only predicted to continue with the growth of the Internet of Things (IoT) in the next few years.
Without routers, switches, network cabling and protocols like BGP there would be no Internet!
This course will teach you how networks actually work and how you are able to connect to websites like Facebook, Google, and YouTube.
Companies throughout the world (from the smallest to the largest) rely on networks designed, installed and maintained by networking engineers. Join this in demand industry!
Start your journey today learning about networking.
Content in this course can be used towards your CCNA. Topics such as IP addressing, subnetting and many others can be applied directly to passing your CCNA certification.
Access our online simulations so you can practice on simulated Cisco routers and switches. You will get to type commands such as enable, configure terminal, router ospf and many others and learn how to configure devices.
I want to welcome you to this Complete Networking Fundamentals course! I'm David Bombal, and I have been teaching networking courses for over 15 years. I qualified as a Cisco Certified Interwork Engineer (CCIE) in 2003 and hold with numerous other networking certifications. I'm also a Cisco and HPE certified instructor where I have trained thousands of networking engineers in many of the largest companies in the world including Fortune 100 companies.
I have designed this course for anyone wanting to learn more about networking and gain foundational knowledge, to help them embark on their networking career. The concepts taught in this course can be applied directly to multiple industry certifications including the Cisco Certified Network Associate (CCNA).
In this course, you will learn about topics such as IP addressing, IP subnetting, Routing, Switches, VLANs, Spanning Tree, Network Address Translation, Wireless and a whole lot more.
You will also learn more about the latest networking trends including OpenFlow and Software Defined Networking.
The course covers the following topics including (and this list will be constantly updated):

Network basics
Network architectures (OSI Model)
What are hubs, switches, routers?
How is data forwarded through a network?
IP addresses
IP subnetting
Cabling and network topologies
Ethernet basics
TCP and UDP
DNS and DHCP
Routing
VLANs
Cisco device initial configurations
ACLs
Network naming
IP Telephony
Quality of Service (QoS)
SDN and OpenFlow
At the end of this course, you will be able to confidently discuss networking topics; and be able to start configuring real networking devices such as routers and switches. In this an introductory course, but contains a lot of information that can be directly applied to the CCNA certification.
The ideal student for this course is someone looking to break into the networking field, someone looking to extend their knowledge from PCs and servers to networking, or someone interested in getting knowledge to work in one of the most exciting, most in-demand jobs in IT - networking.


├── 01 Introduction
│ ├── 001 Introduction.mp4
│ ├── 002 Wireshark.mp4
│ └── 003 Who am I.mp4
├── 02 Introduction to Computer Networking
│ ├── 001 What is a Network.mp4
│ ├── 002 Physical Components.mp4
│ ├── 003 Characteristics of a Network.mp4
│ ├── 004 Network Cost, Security, Availability.mp4
│ ├── 005 Scalability, Reliability.mp4
│ ├── 006 Physical versus logical topology.mp4
│ ├── 007 Network Diagrams.mp4
│ └── 008 Application types and network performance.mp4
├── 03 OSI Model
│ ├── 001 OSI Model Introduction.mp4
│ ├── 002 OSI Model Layers.mp4
│ ├── 003 OSI Model - Split of concentration.mp4
│ ├── 004 OSI Model - Layer 7 Application Layer.mp4
│ ├── 005 OSI Model - Layer 6 Presentation Layer.mp4
│ ├── 006 OSI Model - Layer 5 Session Layer.mp4
│ ├── 007 OSI Model - Top layers versus lower layers.mp4
│ ├── 008 OSI Model - Layer 4 Transport Layer.mp4
│ ├── 009 OSI Model - Layer 3 Network Layer.mp4
│ ├── 010 OSI Model - Layer 2 Data Link Layer.mp4
│ ├── 011 OSI Model - Layer 1 Physical Layer.mp4
│ ├── 012 OSI Model - Host Communication.mp4
│ ├── 013 OSI Model - Encapsulation.mp4
│ ├── 014 OSI Model - TCPIP versus OSI model.mp4
│ └── 015 OSI Model - Demonstration using Wireshark.mp4
├── 04 Binary
│ ├── 001 Binary Introduction.mp4
│ ├── 002 Binary versus Decimal.mp4
│ ├── 003 Examples.mp4
│ ├── 004 Covert IP Addresses to Binary.mp4
│ └── 005 Convert Binary to Decimal.mp4
├── 05 IP Addressing
│ ├── 001 IP Addressing Overview.mp4
│ ├── 002 Demonstration.mp4
│ ├── 003 IP Characteristics.mp4
│ ├── 004 IPv4 Address Format.mp4
│ ├── 005 Network versus Host portion.mp4
│ ├── 006 IPv4 Address format Street Analogy.mp4
│ ├── 007 Address Classes.mp4
│ ├── 008 Class A and B addresses.mp4
│ ├── 009 Class C addresses.mp4
│ ├── 010 Class D and E addresses.mp4
│ ├── 011 Class A, B and C routing.mp4
│ ├── 012 Special IPv4 Addresses.mp4
│ ├── 013 Directed Broadcast Address.mp4
│ ├── 014 Local Broadcast Address.mp4
│ ├── 015 Local Loopback Address.mp4
│ ├── 016 RFC1918 - Private Addresses.mp4
│ ├── 017 RFC1918 - Class A, B, C.mp4
│ ├── 018 IPv4 Link Local Addresses.mp4
│ ├── 019 Subnet Masks.mp4
│ ├── 020 Is a host or remote.mp4
│ ├── 021 Subnet mask demonstrations.mp4
│ ├── 022 Discontiguous Network Masks.mp4
│ └── 023 CIDR.mp4
├── 06 IP Subnetting
│ ├── 001 Binary Method.mp4
│ ├── 002 IP Subnetting Part 1 B.mp4
│ ├── 003 Quick Method.mp4
│ ├── 004 Example 1 and how to subdivide a Network.mp4
│ ├── 005 IP Subnetting 4.1.mp4
│ └── 006 Example 2 Steps 1 to 5.mp4
├── 07 Cabling and Packet Flows
│ ├── 001 How does data flow in hubs, switches and routers.mp4
│ ├── 002 Ethernet history.mp4
│ ├── 003 10base2, MAC addresses,.mp4
│ ├── 004 MAC Addresses, CSMACD.mp4
│ ├── 005 Issues with 10base2, Collision domains.mp4
│ ├── 006 Broadcast domains, 10BaseT.mp4
│ ├── 007 Unshielded Twisted Pair UTP, Cross Over Cables.mp4
│ ├── 008 Which cable should you use Cross over or straight Auto MDI MDIX.mp4
│ ├── 009 Cable Categories, Cat 1 to Cat 8.mp4
│ ├── 010 DAC cable, SFPs.mp4
│ ├── 011 Roll Over Cable.mp4
│ ├── 012 How Devices Operate, Hubs.mp4
│ ├── 013 How does a Hub forward traffic.mp4
│ ├── 014 What is a bridge.mp4
│ ├── 015 How does a bridge forward traffic.mp4
│ ├── 016 What is a switch.mp4
│ ├── 017 How do switches forward traffic.mp4
│ ├── 018 What is half duplex and full duplex.mp4
│ ├── 019 What is a router.mp4
│ ├── 020 How does a router forward traffic.mp4
│ ├── 021 How is traffic routed between subnets.mp4
│ ├── 022 Routing between subnets - What are the IP address and MAC address values.mp4
│ ├── 023 Does a router change the MAC address or IP address.mp4
│ └── 024 Summary or routing, MAC addresses and IP addresses.mp4
├── 08 Cisco IOS Software and Initial Device Configuration
│ ├── 001 Overview.mp4
│ ├── 002 Uses of Cisco IOS Software.mp4
│ ├── 003 Physical connection to the Cisco router.mp4
│ ├── 004 How to connect to a routerswitch.mp4
│ ├── 005 Initial Startup.mp4
│ ├── 006 Configuration of the router.mp4
│ ├── 007 Modes - User.mp4
│ ├── 008 Modes - EnablePrivilege.mp4
│ ├── 009 Modes - User EXEC.mp4
│ ├── 010 Modes - Global Config.mp4
│ ├── 011 Modes - Interface.mp4
│ ├── 012 Modes - Line.mp4
│ ├── 013 Modes - Line continuation and Router mode.mp4
│ ├── 014 Help.mp4
│ ├── 015 Commands.mp4
│ ├── 016 Commands continuation.mp4
│ ├── 017 Managing Cisco IOS Configuration.mp4
│ ├── 018 Copy Running Config Startup Config.mp4
│ ├── 019 Copy Running Config Startup Config continuation.mp4
│ ├── 020 Difference on the configuration.mp4
│ ├── 021 Erase startup config.mp4
│ ├── 022 TFTP Backup.mp4
│ ├── 023 Managing Cisco IOS Configuration.mp4
│ ├── 024 Storing files in Flash.mp4
│ └── 025 Terminal Length.mp4
├── 09 TCP UDP
│ ├── 001 IP Connectionless and Overview.mp4
│ ├── 002 Comparison.mp4
│ ├── 003 TCP Header and Applications.mp4
│ ├── 004 Port Number.mp4
│ ├── 005 TCP 3 Way Handshake.mp4
│ ├── 006 TCP Acknowledgement and Windowing.mp4
│ └── 007 TCP Seq and Ack.mp4
├── 10 DHCP DNS
│ ├── 001 IP Addressing, DHCP, and DHCP Mechanism.mp4
│ ├── 002 DHCP Process.mp4
│ ├── 003 DHCP Server Demonstration.mp4
│ ├── 004 DHCP - ip helper address.mp4
│ └── 005 Domain Name Server DNS and Wireshark capture.mp4
├── 11 Routing Introduction
│ ├── 001 Introduction to IP Routing.mp4
│ ├── 002 Overview.mp4
│ ├── 003 Routed vs. Routing Protocols.mp4
│ ├── 004 Routed protocols.mp4
│ ├── 005 Demonstrations.mp4
│ ├── 006 Static Routes and Dynamic Routes.mp4
│ ├── 007 Static vs. Dynamic Routing.mp4
│ ├── 008 Static vs. Dynamic Routing.mp4
│ ├── 009 How do routers determine the best route.mp4
│ ├── 010 Terms AS, IGPs, EGPs.mp4
│ ├── 011 Types of Routing Protocols -Distance Vector, Link State.mp4
│ ├── 012 EIGRP - advanced distance vector routing protocol.mp4
│ ├── 013 Administrative Distance Introduction.mp4
│ ├── 014 Administrative Distance values.mp4
│ ├── 015 Additional AD values.mp4
│ ├── 016 How does a router route when told conflicting information.mp4
│ ├── 017 Classful routing protocols.mp4
│ ├── 018 Auto summarization.mp4
│ ├── 019 Classless routing protocols.mp4
│ ├── 020 Administrative Distance versus mask length.mp4
│ ├── 021 Administrative Distance and multiple routes with the same mask.mp4
│ ├── 022 Link State Routing Protocols.mp4
│ ├── 023 OSPF Hierarchy - Multiple areas.mp4
│ ├── 024 Benefits of link state routing.mp4
│ └── 025 Drawbacks of link state routing.mp4
├── 12 ACLs
│ ├── 001 Access Control Lists ACLs introduction.mp4
│ ├── 002 ACL demonstrations, wildcard masks.mp4
│ ├── 003 ACL demonstrations.mp4
│ └── 004 Extended ACL demonstrations.mp4
├── 13 Quality of Service QOS
│ ├── 001 Quality of Service Overview.mp4
│ ├── 002 QOS - types of delay, packet loss.mp4
│ ├── 003 What is QOS What are IP Telephony requirements.mp4
│ └── 004 Methods to implement QOS - DiffServ, IntServ, Best Effort.mp4
├── 14 IP Phone Startup Process
│ ├── 001 IP Phone Startup - Power requirements.mp4
│ ├── 002 Demonstration of Cisco IP Telephony configuartion.mp4
│ ├── 003 Demonstration Voice VLAN Configuration.mp4
│ ├── 003 Demonstration Voice VLAN Configuration.mp4.jpg
│ └── 004 How does an IP Phone get an IP address and register with a CUCM.mp4
├── 15 IP Telephony Setup
│ ├── 001 Demonstration Dial peer configuration.mp4
│ ├── 002 Demonstration VoIP dial peers.mp4
│ ├── 003 Demonstration Voice VLAN Configuration.mp4
│ ├── 004 IP Telephony service setup.mp4
│ ├── 005 Demonstration Call debugging.mp4
│ ├── 006 Incoming dial-peers.mp4
│ └── 007 Dial-peer selection.mp4
├── 16 Introduction to SDN and OpenFlow
│ └── 001 Welcome without Intro.mp4
├── 17 What is SDN
│ ├── 001 What do the inventors say it is.mp4
│ ├── 002 Open SDN, SDN via overlays, White box SDN.mp4
│ └── 003 SDN via APIs, Cisco ACI ASICs, OpenStack, NFV.mp4
├── 18 3 - Is this actually real
│ ├── 001 1 -Real World SDN -Google.mp4
│ ├── 002 2 -Real Word- Microsoft.mp4
│ ├── 003 3 -Real World SDN - NSA.mp4
│ ├── 004 4 - Real World SDN - Facebook.mp4
│ ├── 005 5 -Linux on switches.mp4
│ └── 006 6 -Which SDN Controller should you use.mp4
├── 19 4 - Open SDN and OpenFlow
│ ├── 001 1-Control and Dataplane overview.mp4
│ ├── 002 2-Control and Dataplanes continued.mp4
│ ├── 003 3-Davids Dodgy Routing Protocol.mp4
│ ├── 004 4-Server Virtualization.mp4
│ ├── 005 5-Network Abstraction and virtualization.mp4
│ ├── 006 6-SDN Architecture.mp4
│ ├── 007 7-SDN Architecture continued.mp4
│ └── 008 8-North, South, East, West.mp4
├── 20 5 - Demo-Applications Controller Infrastructure
│ ├── 001 1-Mininet Introduction.mp4
│ ├── 002 2- Mininet using OpenFlow 1.3.mp4
│ ├── 003 3- Mininet with 50x OpenFlow switches.mp4
│ ├── 004 4- OpenFlow Tables.mp4
│ ├── 005 5- SDN Architecture.mp4
│ ├── 006 6- SDN App Store, App install and Network flow update.mp4
│ ├── 007 7- REST API - SDN Application.mp4
│ └── 008 8- OpenFlow ACL.mp4
├── 21 6 - Basic Traffic Engineering using a script
│ ├── 001 Basic TE using a bash script Part 1.mp4
│ ├── 002 Basic TE using a bash script Part 2.mp4
│ ├── 003 Basic TE using a bash script Part 3.mp4
│ ├── 004 Basic TE using a bash script Part 4.mp4
│ ├── 005 Basic TE using a bash script Part 5.mp4
│ ├── 006 Basic TE using a bash script Part 6.mp4
│ ├── 007 Basic TE using a bash script Part 7.mp4
│ └── 008 Basic TE using a bash script Part 8.mp4
├── 22 7 - Wrap up
│ ├── 001 1-HP SDN Application example - Network Protector.mp4
│ └── 002 2-OpenStack introduction.mp4
└── 23 Thank you
├── 001 3-ONF OpenFlow Specifications.mp4
└── 002 Thank you for attending. Your feedback is welcome.mp4



Download File Size:1.78 GB


Udemy The Complete Networking Fundamentals Course Your CCNA start
€20
Customers who bought this program also bought:

Home| All Programs| Today added Progs| Your Orders| Helpdesk| Shopping cart      





9327 Fantasy & Sci-Fi eBooks Collection 9327 PDF Books eBook €60


Cambridge University History Collection PDF eBooks €100

                   





DxO PhotoLab 5 ELITE €25


SketchUp Pro 2022 €30


Corel Painter 2023 €40






Orchestral Tools TIME micro KONTAKT €40


Steinberg HALion 6.4.0.101 STANDALONE €40


Native Instruments Komplete 12 Ultimate Collectors Edition €50