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22nd September 2009
Although associated with the Terminal Service is not experiencing much change, but it needs to note that Windows Server 2008 R2 still diperhitugkan as a server operating system unprecedented. Windows Server 2008 R2 associated with TS RemoteApp and TS Web ... Read >
Author: Tutang MM
21st September 2009
Not much different compared to Windows 2008, especially for lovers of Windows 2008 Server Core. So if you are currently using Server Core will not be difficult when you update your system to Windows Core Server 2008 R2.
Please keep in mind before doin... Read >
Author: Tutang MM
17th September 2009
Meet the PlayStation 3, typically called PS3 and developed by Sony computer Entertainment. The PlayStation 3 puts up intense competition to Nintendo's Wii and Microsoft's Xbox 360 as a part of the seventh era of video game consoles. The wireless Sixaxis... Read >
Author: Trent Oliver
11th September 2009
Final Fantasy VIII was released for the Sony Playstation and became insanely popular within days. Containing over one hour of CG animation, Final Fantasy VIII is a dynamic role playing game spanning over four Playstation game discs. The game contains a gr... Read >
Author: Peter Randal Meyers
31st August 2009
One of the first things you’ll notice when you open the box is the cardboard tabs with instructions on how to get your console out. There are two main segments, one of the segments contains the Sixaxis wireless controller, the AV and USB cable including... Read >
Author: kiduka
16th August 2009
You have a spanking new Playstation 3 in your room. The so-called gaming experts tell you that you’ll enjoy playing more with a new controller, but how do you know which one is the best for you? If you’re having a hard time choosing, here are a couple... Read >
Author: Brian Kaldenberg
12th January 2009
If you are trying to install Microsoft Dynamics GP version 10.0 or upgrade in-house from earlier version of Great Plains Dynamics ERP, please read this small publication to get orientation. GP version 10.0 installation and upgrade is very sensitive to yo... Read >
Author: akarasev
26th November 2008
Credible Roulette System: Approve or disapprove the theory of RNG limits.
The source for roulette tips and strategies, roulette systems, free roulette systems.
MMM Network for the first time released several months ago a roulette tool called “Red ... Read >
Author: hank
28th August 2008
Let’s test your knowledge of Power-On Self Tests, SDFs, route redistribution, and other important Cisco certification exam topics!
Answers are at the bottom of the page. No peeking!
CCNA Certification And CCENT Certification:
Identify the corr... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
17th August 2008
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SWG-X from: http://www.appareltextile-china.com/
MACH2X from: http://www.appareltextile-china.com/
Shima’s R2 from: http://www.appareltex... Read >
Author: uebyanglu
23rd May 2008
Here are some free Cisco certification practice exam questions for you , along with a little extra bonus material on recon attacks. Enjoy!
CCNA And CCENT Exam:
A frame enters a switchport. Which of the following does the switch examine first?
A. ... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
02nd May 2008
Here are some free Cisco certification exam training questions to help you prepare for exam success!
CCNA And CCENT Exam:
A frame enters a switchport. Which of the following does the switch examine first?
A. Source IP address
B. Destination ... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
25th April 2008
With the wide circulation of the PlayStation 3, many gamers are sure to buy this new console. The PlayStation 3 has two basic versions: the 20GB and the 60GB. The first version retails at $499.99 while the other is priced at $599.99. The PS3 is sleek in d... Read >
Author: Bill Pratt
25th February 2008
In your preparation for your CCNA and CCNP exams, you should run as many debugs as you can in a lab environment. (Never practice debugs at work.) Debugs also help you spot issues with Cisco router configurations that you might not otherwise identify just... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
06th February 2008
The second referee, also known as the R2, has many officiating
responsibilities. Learning and mastering these basic volleyball
rules and techniques will help your volleyball matches move
along better.
Prematch duties
The second referee is in... Read >
Author: Dennis Jackson
26th June 2007
The list of vehicles that is available to the player is impressive: cars, coaches, busses, limousines, bikes, motorcycles, tanks, boats, helicopters and airplanes that you can ride on the territory of three different cities. If all this complexity seems a... Read >
Author: Michael Rad
07th April 2007
Your BSCI exam may well be the most challenging of the four exams you must pass to become a CCNP, so you have to have the details of every protocol on the exam mastered! Today, we'll look at the passive-interface command as it relates to OSPF.
Pass... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
17th February 2007
Credit reports are the very reason why you've got bad credit and there's a need for credit repair. A bad credit score or a report can adversely affect your ability to seek financial products such as loans, credit cards and the like. Adverse credit history... Read >
Author: Bill Carmel
08th February 2007
The presented article covers the topic of pivot points calculating. Different pivot points are the popular and simple tools of technical analysis in Forex market trading. In this article the rules for floor, Tom Demark’s, Woodies and Camarilla pivot poi... Read >
Author: Andrey Moraru
08th February 2007
EIGRP is a major topic for your CCNA and CCNP studies, and one basic skill you’ll need to pass your Cisco certification exams is to identify situations where you need to enable or disable split horizon. EIGRP commands tend to be a little different than... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
11th January 2007
I've read some non-Cisco documentation that EIGRP will not allow adjacencies to form when secondary addresses are used. This is incorrect, but there is one common error that can result if both addresses are not secondary. To fully prepare for the 642-90... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
10th January 2007
EIGRP is an important part of real-world networking as well as being a major topic on the 642-901 CCNP BSCI exam. As with any networking topic, before you try to master intermediate and advanced skills, you must master the fundamentals. It doesn’t get... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
21st November 2006
Your CCNA certification exam is likely going to contain questions about Telnet, an application-level protocol that allows remote communication between two networking devices. With Telnet use being as common as it is, you had better know the details of h... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
08th August 2006
Part of earning your CCNA and CCNP - especially passing the difficult CIT exam - is becoming a master network troubleshooter. Today, we'll take a look at troubleshooting EIGRP and spotting common errors.
Most adjacency issues are easily resolved - mi... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
25th July 2006
You may run into situations where a router in a remote location needs to dial in to a central router, but the toll charges are much higher if the remote router makes the call. This scenario is perfect for PPP Callback, where the callback client places a ... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
20th July 2006
Earning your Cisco CCNA and CCNP is a tough proposition, and part of that is the fact that you quickly learn that there's usually more than one way to do things with Cisco routers – and while that's generally a good thing, you better know the ins and outs... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
19th July 2006
As a CCNA and/or CCNP candidate, you've got to be able to spot situations where Cisco router features can save your client money and time. For example, if a spoke router is calling a hub router and the toll charges at the spoke site are higher than that ... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
13th July 2006
To pass the Cisco CCNA and CCNP certification exams, as well as becoming a world-class networker, you've got to know how and when to use floating static routes. And if you're wondering what makes them "float" -- read on!
In this example, R1 and R2 are ... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
12th July 2006
To earn your Cisco CCNA and CCNP certifications, you've got to master ISDN - and despite what some people say, there's still a lot of ISDN out there that needs to be supported. And when it comes to troubleshooting ISDN, there's a lot to look at. Is the ... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
16th June 2006
Dialer Watch is a vital part of your CCNA and CCNP studies, particularly for the BCRAN exam, but it's one of the most misunderstood technologies as well. To help you pass the CCNA and CCNP certification exams, here's a detailed look at Dialer Watch.
Di... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
09th June 2006
One of the first things you learned about Frame is that the LMI also serves as a keepalive, or a heartbeat - and if three consecutive LMIs are missed, the line protocol goes down. There's a limitation to LMI as a keepalive, though. The LMI is exchanged ... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
09th May 2006
To pass the BCMSN exam and earn your CCNP, you've got to know HSRP inside and out! Part of that is knowing how the MAC address of the virtual router is derived, and another part is knowing how to change this address. We'll look at both features in this ... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
09th May 2006
Part of studying for CCNA exam success is keeping all these new commands straight in your head! And let's face it, there are a lot of commands you need to know in order to pass the CCNA exam and earn that certification. Here's a review of some very import... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
07th May 2006
To pass the BCMSN exam and earn your CCNP certification, you've got to know HSRP inside and out. While the operation and basic commands of HSRP are pretty simple, there are some important details that are easily overlooked but are vital in getting HSRP to... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
02nd May 2006
To earn your CCNP certification and pass the BCMSN exam, you've got to know what HSRP does and the many configurable options. While the operation of HSRP is quite simple (and covered in a previous tutorial), you also need to know how HSRP arrives at the ... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
02nd May 2006
CCNP exam success, particularly on the BSCI exam, demands you understand the details of route summarization. This skill not only requires that you have a comfort level with binary conversions, but you have to know how and where to apply route summarizati... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
30th April 2006
Defined in RFC 2281, HSRP is a Cisco-proprietary protocol in which routers are put into an HSRP router group. Along with dynamic routing protocols and STP, HSRP is considered a high-availability network service, since all three have an almost immediate cu... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
13th April 2006
RIP isn't exactly the most complex routing protocol on the CCNA exam, but that makes it easy to overlook some of the important details you must keep in mind in order to pass the exam! To help you review for the exam, here are just a few of those details!... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
12th April 2006
For CCNA exam success, you had better know what split horizon is, how to turn it off, and when to turn it off. Knowing when to turn split horizon off is also important in production networks, because it can cause a hub-and-spoke network to have incomplet... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
12th April 2006
To pass the BSCI exam and become a CCNP, you have to be aware of the proper use of passive interfaces. You learned about passive interfaces in your CCNA studies, but here we'll review the basic concept and clear up one misconception regarding passive int... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
08th April 2006
OSPF is a major topic on your CCNA exam, as well it should be. OSPF is a widely-used WAN protocol, and you need to learn the fundamentals before moving on to more complicated configurations. One such detail is the OSPF Router ID, or RID.
The RID is the... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
08th April 2006
To pass the CCNA exam, you've got to know the role of the bandwidth command with IGRP and EIGRP and when to use it. In this tutorial, we'll configure IGRP over a frame relay hub-and-spoke network using the following networks:
R1 (the hub), R2, and R3 a... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
06th April 2006
The Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP) sure looks simple enough, but there are quite a few details to know for success on the CCNA exam. In your CCNP studies, you'll be introduced to additional uses for CDP, but for now it's enough to know that CDP is design... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
06th April 2006
A major part of your BSCI and CCNP exam success is mastering BGP, and that includes filtering BGP routing updates. In this tutorial, we'll take a look at how to filter BGP updates with prefix lists.
R4 is advertising three networks via BGP. The downst... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
04th April 2006
In this CCNA case study, we'll take some basic switching and trunking theory and put it into action. We have two routers (R2 and R3) along with two switches (SW1 and SW2). R2 is connected to SW1 at fast 0/2, and R3 is connected to SW2 at fast 0/3. Both... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
01st April 2006
DNS behaviors of a Cisco router are important topics for both the CCNA exam and real-world production networks, and you probably didn't know there were so many DNS details before you began studying for the exam! In this tutorial, we'll look at the ip name... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
01st April 2006
BSCI exam success, not to mention earning your CCNP, can come down to your OSPF route summarization skills. There are a few different commands and situations you need to be ready for, and one of these situations is the proper use of the "summary-address" ... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
01st April 2006
Configuring RIPv2 and EIGRP authentication with key chains can be tricky at first, and the syntax isn't exactly easy to remember. But for BSCI and CCNP exam success, we've got to be able to perform this task.
In a previous tutorial, we saw how to confi... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
31st March 2006
Policy routing is a major topic on your BSCI exam, and you'll find quite a bit of policy routing going on in today's production networks. But what exactly is policy routing?
Policy-based routing, generally referred to as "policy routing", is the use o... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
28th March 2006
When you earned your CCNA, you thought you learned everything there is to know about RIP. Close, but not quite! There are some additional details you need to know to pass the BSCI exam and get one step closer to the CCNP exam, and one of those involves RI... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
28th March 2006
CCNA exam success depends greatly on knowing the details, and if there's one protocol that has a lot of details, it's OSPF! This is true particularly of hub-and-spoke networks, so in this CCNA OSPF tutorial we'll take a look at some of the more important... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
27th March 2006
CCNA exam success depends on mastering many technologies that are new to you, and few exam topics have more details than ISDN. ISDN isn't just for your CCNA exam studies, though. While ISDN is dismissed by many, the fact is that there are many small and... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
22nd March 2006
Your BSCI and CCNP exam success depends on knowing the details, and one such detail is knowing the proper way to summarize routes in OSPF. Route summarization is not just a test of your binary conversion abilities, but knowing where and when to summarize... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
15th March 2006
As your CCNA / CCNP home lab expands, an access server such as the Cisco 2509 or 2511 is one of the best investments you can make. In this article, we'll look at the basic configuration for an access server and discuss how to connect to the other routers... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
14th February 2006
To pass your BSCI exam and earn your CCNP certification, you've got to master route summarization. When you get to the BSCI level, actually breaking the routes down into binary strings and performing summarization is second nature to you. (If it isn't, ge... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
09th February 2006
When you're studying for your BSCI exam and CCNP certification, you quickly realize that BGP is a whole new world from anything you've previously studies. One topic that sometimes confuses CCNP candidates is when a BGP route reflector needs to be configu... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
25th January 2006
While studying to pass the BSCI exam and preparing to earn your CCNP certification, you'll quickly notice that while OSPF and ISIS are both link-state protocols, there are a lot of differences between the two. One major difference is the way the two prot... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
23rd January 2006
When you're studying for the BSCI exam on the way to earning your CCNP certification, you've got to master the use of BGP attributes. These attributes allow you to manipulate the path or paths that BGP will use to reach a given destination when multiple p... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
14th January 2006
When you start studying for your CCNA and CCNP exams, many books will present you with a huge list of keystroke shortcuts for use on Cisco routers. While the 640-801, 811, and 821 exams may ask you about one or two of these, you really have to get hands-... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
14th January 2006
When you're studying for the CCNP certification, especially the BSCI exam, you must gain a solid understanding of BGP. BGP isn't just one of the biggest topics on the BSCI exam, it's one of the largest. BGP has a great many details that must be mastered... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
15th December 2005
Occasionally, during your CCNA and CCNP studies, you'll run into a term that just doesn't quite make sense to you. (Okay, more than occasionally!) One such term is "reverse telnet". As a Cisco certification candidate, you know that telnet is simply a p... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
13th November 2005
A CCNA or CCNP candidate who wants to be totally prepared for their exams is going to put together a home lab to practice on. With used Cisco routers and switches more affordable and plentiful then ever before, there's really no excuse to not have one!
... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
05th November 2005
A Cisco access server is generally the last item a CCNA or CCNP candidate has on their mind when they're putting together a home lab. The thinking tends to be that since this router isn't really doing anything in the production part of your practice lab, ... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
05th November 2005
In part III of this ISDN primer, we learned that PPP has two main methods of authentication that Cisco certification candidates need to know how to configure: PAP and CHAP.
PAP has very few advantages over CHAP. PAP passwords are carried over the lin... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
05th November 2005
Now we know how the ISDN link comes up (interesting traffic), and some scenarios that might cause the link to stay up, we need to look at ISDN authentication schemes. The two methods Cisco certification candidates must be familiar with are PAP and CHAP. ... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
05th November 2005
One point of confusion for some CCNA and CCNP candidates is the difference between configuring a static default route and using the Cisco routing command ip default-network.
At first glance, they appear to do the same thing. Both configure a destinatio... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
05th November 2005
Introduction To ISDN, Part III: Configuring PPP PAP Authentication
Now we know how the ISDN link comes up (interesting traffic), and some scenarios that might cause the link to stay up, we need to look at ISDN authentication schemes. The two methods ... Read >
Author: Chris Bryant
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