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ОтветитьWow, you explained that so clearly and concisely.
ОтветитьThanks Blake.
ОтветитьThank you for sharing this video, really was very helpful to me.
ОтветитьHow can i know when a directly attached static route to an interface is using ARP?
ОтветитьI was crying thinking of dropping my programming major because of this mandotory networking class but you have picked me up form the depths of my despair. Thank you.
Ответитьmade 8 years ago, but today in 2020 this saved my ass. thank you
ОтветитьWhat software is that you are using for the demo?
ОтветитьThanks man
ОтветитьExactly what I was looking for. Thanks. not sure what there was to dislike.<smh>
ОтветитьWhat sorcery is this? i mean simulator
ОтветитьThat's real great explanation of basic Cisco configuration interfaces! Thanks Blake!
ОтветитьThanks for the post Blake.
Ответитьthank you for good
ОтветитьHi, may i ask how do u know which one is the destination address and the next hop ip address?
ОтветитьThat's understandable..
Ответитьthis is just assigning an ip address....not really a static route...static routes use this format conf t ip route 10.10.20.0 255.255.255.0 192.168.100.1
ОтветитьGood job my man!!
Ответитьhe's the van gogh of IT :D
ОтветитьEventhough it is short, very useful and explain the idea behind the static route clearly.
ОтветитьThank you, nice explanation. May i know why we use 255.255.255.0 as subnet mask for 10.10.1.2? Is not that 10.10.1.2 under class A? or are you using as 10.10.1.2/24? I am newbie to CCNA, correct me if I am wrong.
ОтветитьThanks man! Will do ;)
ОтветитьGreat tutorial! Short and to the point. Keep up the good work!
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