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What is the best way to learn computer networking?

04.30.2010 · Posted in Networking

I am not during all savvy upon mechanism networking. you usually know how to write, log, roller as well as download etc. though you have tighten to 0 believe in networks. Is there a program or hardware-software which visually uncover me step by step is to scold as well as surprise me fundamentally how to say my network running? you cite visible rsther than than formulated techically since you am so foolish in a recommendation you have been Fachsprache.Ihre dankbar.RD

7 Responses to “What is the best way to learn computer networking?”

  1. The Lunatic says:

    network plus and cisco courses

  2. wario1998 says:

    If you want to learn in LAMENS terms basic networking, go to your local library or bookstore and pickup “networking for dummies”.

    This is a great book and they dont speak tech talk.

    If you want this as a certification, get a book called network + by Comptia. Good Luck.

  3. guruMama says:

    It depends on just how far you are wanting to take it. Are you setting up a network for public use, your private web page, or just a home network. A home network is pretty easy and if you buy a router most will have a tech support number with a real person that will guide you the whole way. As for anything more complicated, either take a class or go to half price books and look through the resources.

  4. TNT Computer says:

    My husband went to college for 2 years to learn computer networking! Good Luck!

    NO, I’m kidding. I don’t know if there is anything. Try to go on a website such as amazon.com where they sell books and cds and stuff and see if there is anything on there that you could buy. Even the library may have some books that would provide pretty good pictures for you to look at.

    Good Luck

  5. alamgeer says:

    Computer networking is the scientific and engineering discipline concerned with communication between computer systems. Such networks involve at least two devices capable of being networked with at least one usually being a computer. The devices can be separated by a few meters (e.g. via Bluetooth) or thousands of kilometers (e.g. via the Internet). Computer networking is sometimes considered a sub-discipline of telecommunications.
    History
    Carrying instructions between calculation machines and early computers was done by human users. In September, 1940 George Stibitz used a teletype machine to send instructions for a problem set from his Model K at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire to his Complex Number Calculator in New York and received results back by the same means. Linking output systems like teletypes to computers was an interest at the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) when, in 1962, J.C.R. Licklider was hired and developed a working group he called the “Intergalactic Network”, a precursor to the ARPANet. In 1964, researchers at Dartmouth developed the Dartmouth Time Sharing System for distributed users of large computer systems. The same year, at MIT, a research group supported by General Electric and Bell Labs used a computer (DEC’s PDP-8) to route and manage telephone connections. Throughout 1960s Leonard Kleinrock, Paul Baran and Donald Davies had independently conceptualized and developed network systems consisting of datagrams or packets that could be used in a packet switching network between computer systems. In 1969 the University of California at Los Angeles, SRI (in Stanford), University of California at Santa Barbara, and the University of Utah were connected as the beginning of the ARPANet network using 50 kbit/s circuits.

    Networks, and the technologies needed to connect and communicate through and between them, continue to drive computer hardware, software, and peripherals industries. This expansion is mirrored by growth in the numbers and types of users of networks from researcher

    By scale
    Personal area network (PAN)
    Local area network (LAN)
    Campus area network (CAN)
    Metropolitan area network (MAN)
    Wide area network (WAN)
    [edit]
    By connection method
    HomePNA
    Power line communication (HomePlug)
    Ethernet
    WiFi
    [edit]
    By functional relationship
    Active Networking (Low-level code movement versus static data)
    Client-server
    Peer-to-peer (Workgroup)
    [edit]
    By network topology
    Bus network
    Star network
    Ring network
    Mesh network
    Star-bus network
    [edit]
    By Services provided
    Storage area networks
    Server farms
    Process control networks
    Value-added network
    SOHO network
    Wireless community network
    XML appliance
    Jungle Networks
    [edit]
    Protocol stacks
    Computer networks may be implemented using a variety of protocol stack architectures, computer buses or combinations of media and protocol layers, incorporating one or more of:

    ARCNET
    AppleTalk
    ATM
    Bluetooth
    DECnet
    Ethernet
    FDDI
    Frame relay
    HIPPI
    IEEE 1394 aka FireWire, iLink
    IEEE 802.11 aka Wireless LAN (Wi-Fi certification)
    IEEE-488
    IP
    IPX
    Myrinet
    QsNet
    RS-232
    SPX
    System Network Architecture
    Token Ring
    TCP
    TCP Tuning for discussion of improving performance of same
    USB
    UDP
    X.25
    For a list of more see Network protocols.

    For standards see IEEE 802.

    [edit]
    Suggested topics
    Further reading for acquiring an in-depth understanding of computer networks include:

    Communication theory
    [edit]
    Data transmission
    [edit]
    Wired transmission
    Public switched telephone network
    Modems and dialup
    Dedicated lines – leased lines
    ISDN
    DSL
    Time-division multiplexing(TDM)
    Packet switching
    Frame relay
    PDH
    Ethernet
    RS-232
    RS-485
    Optical fiber transmission
    Synchronous optical networking(SONET)
    Fiber distributed data interface
    [edit]
    Wireless transmission
    Extreme Short range
    ZigBee
    Short range
    Bluetooth
    InfraRed(IrDA)
    Medium range
    WiFi(IEEE 802.11)
    Long range
    Satellite
    MMDS
    SMDS
    Mobile phone data transmission (channel access methods)
    CDMA
    CDPD
    GSM
    TDMA
    Paging networks
    DataTAC
    Mobitex
    Motient
    [edit]
    Other
    Computer networking device
    Network card
    Naming schemes
    Network monitoring
    [edit]
    See also
    Active Networking
    Computing
    Minimum spanning tree
    Graph theory
    Prim’s algorithm
    Robert C. Prim
    Vojt?ch Jarník
    Joseph Kruskal
    ARPANET
    BITNET
    Internet
    Internet networks:
    Backbone
    Transit
    Stub
    Ambient network
    [edit]
    References
    Larry Peterson, “Computer Networks” (ISBN 1-55860-832-X).
    Andrew S. Tanenbaum, “Computer Networks” (ISBN 0-13-349945-6).
    Important publications in computer networks
    [edit]
    External links
    Easy Network Concepts (Linux kernel specific)
    Computer Networks and Protocol (Research document, 2006)
    Computer Networking Glossary
    Data Communication Resource

    Try some web site of microsft
    also do some cources like CCNA , MCSE, LINUX etc from some where than u will learn basics.
    Thanks buddy

  6. toufiq a says:

    I do not know

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