Im currently studting CCNA at coursera and i dont understand any of them i feel like its too much information is being thrown in one topic. This is the best video i found. thank you so much for your effort making these videos.
Thanks! I enjoyed watching this video way more than I expected. I am amazed how how clear and simple your teaching is, even I could understand it! Bring on the modern spanning tree video!!
I was taking an online course from coursera, and I had an absolutely hard time understand it and how it worked, unit I just looked on TH-cam and found your playlists. Which is great because I now have a deeper understanding of networking. Thankyou, ps, I haven’t gotten my CCNA yet and I can’t wait to watch more of your videos.
Awesome series! Your explanations are clear and on point. Im learning a lot through them. Finished the fundamentals one now expanding into this! Keep up the great work!
Please keep doing the great work, your videos are great asset for new learners and as well as for the refreshers like me :) Thank you @Network Direction
For question 8, in most cases making SW04 the root bridge is sensible but for the example topology SW02 being root doesn't matter as all other switches have to go through SW04 anyways so it makes no difference at the end of the day, is that right or am I completely off the mark?
Pretty well on the mark. SW04 would generally be the best to be the root bridge, as that's where the servers are connected, and where most traffic will go. As it is now, the fast link from SW01 to SW04 will be blocked, with the slower link from SW01-SW02-SW04 being enabled.
Im currently studting CCNA at coursera and i dont understand any of them i feel like its too much information is being thrown in one topic. This is the best video i found. thank you so much for your effort making these videos.
Thanks! I enjoyed watching this video way more than I expected. I am amazed how how clear and simple your teaching is, even I could understand it! Bring on the modern spanning tree video!!
Glad you like it. Next video in a couple of days
I was taking an online course from coursera, and I had an absolutely hard time understand it and how it worked, unit I just looked on TH-cam and found your playlists. Which is great because I now have a deeper understanding of networking. Thankyou, ps, I haven’t gotten my CCNA yet and I can’t wait to watch more of your videos.
I love to hear stories like this, thank you!
Excellent quality, i hope you'll make more videos
Awesome series! Your explanations are clear and on point. Im learning a lot through them. Finished the fundamentals one now expanding into this! Keep up the great work!
Please keep doing the great work, your videos are great asset for new learners and as well as for the refreshers like me :) Thank you @Network Direction
Thank you Muhammad, I will try!
Completely useful for me!!!! Thanks for sharing😎⚒️
Really glad to hear it's useful!
@@NetworkDirection of course it is, and thanks for sharing!! I am preparing myself to CCNAv7!! Hopefully within 3months I will take it!!😎👍⚒️
@@joseenriquerodriguez8737 I hope you pass!
@@NetworkDirection Thanks for your good wishes... I will do my best as I'm doing it... And with your video, sure I will😎👌🏻
you explain d best
Thanks!
For question 8, in most cases making SW04 the root bridge is sensible but for the example topology SW02 being root doesn't matter as all other switches have to go through SW04 anyways so it makes no difference at the end of the day, is that right or am I completely off the mark?
Pretty well on the mark.
SW04 would generally be the best to be the root bridge, as that's where the servers are connected, and where most traffic will go.
As it is now, the fast link from SW01 to SW04 will be blocked, with the slower link from SW01-SW02-SW04 being enabled.
First one to comment😅
nice!
One of the best course in Absolute of ccna. How can i have full course question and explanation??. I Will pay