Yes when I took "networks" as part of my CS degree 12 years ago most of it was
socket programming and had very little to do with infrastructure management. I
don't think that has changed much talking to recent graduates.
Phil
-Original Message-
From: "Kinkaid, Kyle"
Sent: 12/23/201
I will agree with most of the others that took the Cisco academy courses at
the local community college. it all depends on the instructor. My 1st
year was taught in the evenings by a full time Network Engineer. Best 3
terms I had. The problem was that year two was taught be a bunch of old
guys
Last time I taught, I lectured (senior-level 3-credit elective) on calculating
the efficiency of Ethernet and why it was no good above 10Mbps.
On Dec 23, 2014, at 15:29, Mike Hammett wrote:
> At the time, though, Ethernet belonged within a building. If you were wanting
> to connect multiple bu
On 12/23/14 12:40 PM, Randy Bush wrote:
>> I was hoping that everyone just put 175.45.176.0/22 in their bogon list.
> why? is it something despicable such as the dee cee propaganda engine?
Because poorly targeted prefix filtering works so well for spam and
ddos... except that it doesn't.
> randy
>
> I was hoping that everyone just put 175.45.176.0/22 in their bogon list.
why? is it something despicable such as the dee cee propaganda engine?
randy
When I took my CCNA a bit over ten years ago, it was terribly out of date. That
said, I beleive I was the last class to go through on that version. The next
one added OSPF and some other things.
At the time, though, Ethernet belonged within a building. If you were wanting
to connect multiple b
I've gone through the CNA (Cisco Networking Academy) program at a US college
and got a 4 year Bachelors of Science from there. The program took me through
CCNP level courses and prepared me well for taking the CCNP level certs. They
also touched on a broad swath of technology from monitoring sys
> On Dec 23, 2014, at 11:53 AM, Javier J wrote:
>
> What would be the point in blocking them? They don't even have electricity
> in the country, what would I worry about coming out of their IP block that
> wouldn't be more interesting than dangerous. Pretty obvious if it was
> really them behind
What would be the point in blocking them? They don't even have electricity
in the country, what would I worry about coming out of their IP block that
wouldn't be more interesting than dangerous. Pretty obvious if it was
really them behind the Sony hack, it was outsourced.
http://www.standupameric
On Mon, Dec 22, 2014 at 3:31 PM, Ken Chase wrote:
> Learning how to do CIDR math is a major core component of the coursework?
> Im
> thinking that this is about a 30 minute module in the material, once you
> know
> binary, powers of 2 and some addition and subtraction (all of which is
> taught
>
Why you suggest it?
On Tue, Dec 23, 2014 at 8:38 PM, Joe Hamelin wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 22, 2014 at 6:05 PM, Valdis Kletnieks
> wrote:
>
>> Any of you guys want to fess up? :)
>>
>>
>> http://www.msnbc.com/the-ed-show/watch/north-koreas-internet-goes-dark-376097859903
>>
>> (Yes, I know, they're
On Mon, Dec 22, 2014 at 6:05 PM, Valdis Kletnieks
wrote:
> Any of you guys want to fess up? :)
>
>
> http://www.msnbc.com/the-ed-show/watch/north-koreas-internet-goes-dark-376097859903
>
> (Yes, I know, they're saying it's a DDoS, not a routing hack...)
I was hoping that everyone just put 175.
On Tue, Dec 23, 2014 at 1:02 AM, Marshall Eubanks <
marshall.euba...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> On Mon, Dec 22, 2014 at 11:16 PM, Javier J
> wrote:
>
>> But I can ping them.
>>
>> https://nknetobserver.github.io/
>>
>> And what would it matter if its offline, they already block their
>> population.
In addition to my "9 to 5" job of network engineer, I teach evening courses
at a US community college (for you non-USers, it's a place for the first
2-years of post-secondary education, typically before proceeding to a full
4-year university). The community college I work at participates in the
Ci
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