Learning Advanced Networking
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@handsofqwerty said:
Network+
Network+ is not even remotely advanced. I don;t think it even covers Vlans, QoS, NAT, STP, OSPF, BRGP.
The Main point of the Network+ is understanding the layers of the OSI model for troubleshooting.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
@handsofqwerty said:
Network+
Network+ is not even remotely advanced. I don;t think it even covers Vlans, QoS, NAT, STP, OSPF, BRGP.
The Main point of the Network+ is understanding the layers of the OSI model for troubleshooting.
It touches on subnetting and some of the other stuff, but definitely not as deep as something like the CCNA. I will agree with that.
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If you want to really learn networking stuff, I would recommend starting with the CCNA.
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Network+ is what we suggest our new interns do. Very good for a beginner but VERY beginner. But I do suggest if you are trying to fill in the gaps then do it right. Go back to the beginning . I have learned with many IT pro's that they have big gaps way back at the beginning because they jumped in both feet first. They have the know how but don't know the whys. Sometimes you need the how to and the why's when networking especially.
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I need this with IPv6
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@Dashrender said:
I need this with IPv6
I have been so bad about spending time to get this down solid.
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@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
I need this with IPv6
I have been so bad about spending time to get this down solid.
I've read some documentation a handful of times.. I'm just completely lost.
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Sounds like we should do an ML online training
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@Dashrender said:
@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
I need this with IPv6
I have been so bad about spending time to get this down solid.
I've read some documentation a handful of times.. I'm just completely lost.
I know it's 128-bit, the address includes the MAC address and I believe the actual IP portion is 64-bit, but I have to brush up...
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@Minion-Queen said:
Network+ is what we suggest our new interns do. Very good for a beginner but VERY beginner. But I do suggest if you are trying to fill in the gaps then do it right. Go back to the beginning . I have learned with many IT pro's that they have big gaps way back at the beginning because they jumped in both feet first. They have the know how but don't know the whys. Sometimes you need the how to and the why's when networking especially.
The Net+, at least back when I did it, has good foundational knowledge. Stuff that we hope everyone would know. Good for roles that are not networking based and doesn't hurt those that plan to go towards networking (but doesn't help much either.) It's really handy knowledge or things like basic SMB networking and standard LAN troubleshooting, even at the desktop level.
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@scottalanmiller said:
even at the desktop level.
That's really what it's designed for is technicians troubleshooting.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
@scottalanmiller said:
even at the desktop level.
That's really what it's designed for is technicians troubleshooting.
Yes, and I feel that it is excellent for that. And good as a launching point for most anything in IT.