Added: 4 years ago
From: ittechtalk
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  • amazing

  • Nice video,

    should fix the error at 6:32 though..

  • Dude you need to relook at your video cause at the subnetting part,

    203.200.10.60 which is 6:32 or 60 = 00111100

    Please correct your video as it is wrong, can't believe only one person here has caught this.

  • 6:32, 60=00111100, do not confuse people!

  • @uzone2007 Ye, I were like "That's not right" :P

    However, nice video. I aldready knew about all this but I watched the videos to remember everything easier.

  • This is an interesting way to do it. Though Lammle's method utilizing block sizes seems a LOT quicker, which is important come test time.

  • Excellent tutorials John! Very clear and easy to understand...a great aid to anyone studying subnetting and CCNA.

  • Thanks. Could you put more exercise for subnetting in different way. The class A is most difficult in subnetting.

  • Comment removed

  • 60 = 111100

  • thanks a lot for these tutorials,

  • This series is a great fundamentals training course for IP Addressing. Although almost every training you will take will approach this with significantly less information by looking at shortcut relationships. I am not sure this method is best suited for CCNA, but if someone plans on moving past CCNA then it could be helpful. If you someone is just studying for the CCNA and has no plans of moving on then there are shortcuts so you don't have to calculate binary for 2 hours during a test.

  • A great IP Addressing refresher from A-Z in less than 50 minutes. I was reminded of a few things that I virtually never use. Thanks for making my life easier :-)

  • In the end when he says that 63 is the Broadcast address, I would not say that the last octet represents the broadcast address. The the router would not either, it only recognises the entire 32 bits of Network and Host as the broadcast address. You could say that when the last octet is 63 then the broadcast address is represented within or part of the last octet.

  • Thanks help all videos modules in this lessons 1-5 thumbs up :)

  • on video # 5 how does (60) become 00111000 instead of 00111100 on the 203.200.10.60 example that ain't right.

  • @munemo .60 is meant to be a host address not network addess. so this fits in the range of .57 and .62. with .56 being the network and 63 broadcast. he is right, be not explained well..

  • @3lijah81 actually, yes your right. my bad, there should be a another 1, but the numbers are correct.

  • in 4 out of the 5 videos in this series he has had easily spotted mistakes and said things that were just plain wrong. i dont recommened these videos if you are trying to learn this.

  • that is a classless ip address also called subnetting the subnet. the network address borrowed 5 bits from the host portion.

  • if 1 and 0 is 0 then it does not really matter....

  • So it should be 66 right?

  • thank u

  • it's should be 56 yes... gr8 vid.. anyways! 5*

  • Yes I thought I was going insane. If 21youdanny is wrong and I am going insane someone tell me. Awsome videos btw I appreciate them hugely

  • Great vid john

  • thanks, brilliant lessonx

  • man you are awesome...i've never seen a tutorial as understandable as that one.. thanks a lot.

  • good english work straight to the point no missing about thanks great video

  • You freakin' genius! :-)

  • Very informative videos John, thanks for teaching us

  • Thanks for posting this. Hope to see more videos soon!

  • 60 decimal its 111100

  • ya i saw that too, i was soooo confused, and i was like this guy fucked up.

  • i think he makes a mistake there, if you actually do it right which would mean

    60 decimal

    00111100 binary

    11111000 subnet mask

    00111000 logical AND

    = 56(from logical AND conversion into decimal)

    56 is subnet.

  • i think he makes a mistake there, if you actually do it right which would mean

    60 decimal

    00111100 binary

    11111000 subnet mask

    00111000 logical AND

    = 56(from logical AND conversion into decimal)

    56 is subnet.

  • I found these very helpful. Thanks for sharing!

  • salamat!

  • wow. I would definitely love to see more, this was a REALLY great tutorial

  • thats very helpful.

    thanks for that and please provide some more lesson

  • i watched em all and now i have a lil better understanding of tcp/ip WELL DONE MENS!

  • thank you as a ccna doing the second part of the course ver 4.0 routing protacols this is helpful to me you are a true God and cisco ninja thanks please put more on about Classless Inter-Domain Routing and vlan,s thank you so kindly you tube my education platform in fact run a complete course i will watch it thanks

  • what are packets?

  • dont fool around, he is making a very good job here... Helped me a lot.

    Thanks John, great work keep it up

  • 00111000 is 56 you idiot, I like how you explain it, very easy going, keep em coming, Thanx a gain and look forward for more stuff.

  • arfin is right, 00111000 is 56 not 60.

    but nice tutorial, thank you.

  • Very well made video. The explainations are really simple to follow.

    Would love to see more

  • well done! cheers!

  • excellent well presented

  • great man

  • Great video, helped a lot.

    At 6:37 the Decimal number 60, is actually represented as 56, the 3rd bit is a 0 when it should be a 1.

    Thanks for the video!

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