I saw the names for half-duplex ethernet and immediately was taken to my teen years and the sci-fi channel with my dad. thank you for breaking down these concepts so well
In the N10-008 objectives, they mention CSMA/CD under 2.3. However in the acronyms list, they also mention CSMA/CA. I didn't see any mention of it in your videos but I know how strict you follow the objectives. I'll just study it in case it comes up
@@woodcrest4655 nah I don’t think so. messer even said in the vid that it’s not required but it’s useful to know basically that it contains the source/destination MAC addresses and the payload which has IP data
@@woodcrest4655 from what I’ve seen it could be 1 month-6 months. that’s a wide range tho. personally I did my A+ and did N+ in 4-5 weeks of consistent studying. there’s a lot of new concepts but a month seems reasonable
With CSMA/CD, how can a device transmit a jam signal if that Ethernet connection has already been locked up by the original collision? Wouldn't the jam signal itself collide over that connection?
You can listen while sending. So what happens is a device receives a transmission while they are sending out. They send a Jam signal and then start a random back off timer. Everyone receiving the Jam signal also starts their own random back off timer. That's my understanding of it. So half duplex can't send and receive, but it can listen and send.
I'm still a bit confused: how does a sender resolve the target's MAC address before sending the traffic? E.g. the "SGC server" is 2 hops away from Sam, how does Sam get its MAC?
Your videos are unparalleled. Thank you for being such a great teacher.
I saw the names for half-duplex ethernet and immediately was taken to my teen years and the sci-fi channel with my dad. thank you for breaking down these concepts so well
I found these videos while looking for a way to prep for CompTIA exams. I stuck around for the SG-1 references.
Love the Stargate reference, gives the brain a bit of a breather with something fun.
Lol I was just about to say the same when I realized Teal'c was one of the clients
Nice Stargate reference
Indeed.
@@jeuno2I got it. Lol
Love the SG1 call out. it actually taught me a good bit about networking i never realized lol
SGC was an awesome show
Awesome videos but I really love the SGC references that pop up in your videos.
Still grinding. Thanks for the A+, btw.
I was trying to figure out why the marmalade was on the screen at 10:25 and then he said 'jam'
In the N10-008 objectives, they mention CSMA/CD under 2.3. However in the acronyms list, they also mention CSMA/CA. I didn't see any mention of it in your videos but I know how strict you follow the objectives. I'll just study it in case it comes up
@@woodcrest4655 nah I don’t think so. messer even said in the vid that it’s not required but it’s useful to know basically that it contains the source/destination MAC addresses and the payload which has IP data
@@woodcrest4655 from what I’ve seen it could be 1 month-6 months. that’s a wide range tho. personally I did my A+ and did N+ in 4-5 weeks of consistent studying. there’s a lot of new concepts but a month seems reasonable
CSMA/CA is used in wireless networks for Collison Avoidance. Think of CSMA/CA for 802.11 (wifi). CSMA/CD is for 802.3 (ethernet).
With CSMA/CD, how can a device transmit a jam signal if that Ethernet connection has already been locked up by the original collision? Wouldn't the jam signal itself collide over that connection?
You can listen while sending. So what happens is a device receives a transmission while they are sending out. They send a Jam signal and then start a random back off timer. Everyone receiving the Jam signal also starts their own random back off timer. That's my understanding of it. So half duplex can't send and receive, but it can listen and send.
I'm still a bit confused: how does a sender resolve the target's MAC address before sending the traffic? E.g. the "SGC server" is 2 hops away from Sam, how does Sam get its MAC?
ARP
Regarding CSMA/CD… is there a particular reason the wait value is random, instead of say procedural?
If you're trying to avoid everyone talking at the same time, you'd probably want to start by making sure everyone won't talk at the same time. :)
Thank you for this video
im currently 3d printing an F-302 model!
Dude I just realized these are star gate SG1 references.... im dumb lmao