I always sensed his passion for networking concepts when listening to the audios and now watching him explain these concepts, in the way he does it, confirms my belief. Hands down the best Trainer/Instructor/Mentor when it comes to Networking.
Today, first time I have cleared the concept of LSA and ABR how it should work in the OSPF routing protocol. Neighbors are the routers in each area... I have cleared concept eventually. Thanks so much.
WOW this is my first time viewing your videos and I must compliment you, the friendly and helpfull person you are has helped me understand the meaning of OSPF, i wil subscride and share your link.
Your videos are amazing. Thank you so much for sharing your insane depth of knowledge, in such a fun and simple way! I understood instantly concepts that I thought were really hard.
Hello Paypre! Thanks for the question. OSPF is faster, as it has direct knowledge (from all the LSAs) for every network in the area. If there is a change or if an existing router goes down, the neighbors will know about that right away, and inform the rest of the routers in the area. With a distance vector routing protocol like RIP, that does not have formal neighborships, if a RIP router fails or goes away, it will be quite a while (after a timeout) before the rest of the network will remove those routes that are no longer available. Hope that helps, and happy studies.
We'll pass your request onto Keith! If you’re looking for some more info on WAN, we recommend checking out this skill: www.cbtnuggets.com/learn/it-training/wan-technologies
I always sensed his passion for networking concepts when listening to the audios and now watching him explain these concepts, in the way he does it, confirms my belief. Hands down the best Trainer/Instructor/Mentor when it comes to Networking.
One of the best teacher in CBT nuggets is you sir...👍
strongly agree. I like his details.
Today, first time I have cleared the concept of LSA and ABR how it should work in the OSPF routing protocol. Neighbors are the routers in each area... I have cleared concept eventually. Thanks so much.
Hi Boss, you are the best teacher of networking in the world.
OG of IT for a reason! Thanks Keith for the nugget.
That is the best explanation of OSPF I have ever seen... You are a master of your craft.....
Man you are just a life saver. You have made the topic so easy after your genious explanation. Thank you and keep up the good work
The cups and cards representation was an excellent visual aid.
The cup analogy is very helpful in explaining LSAs and Database per routing and how they are shared well done.
This channel deserves more subs! Thanks, Keith!
Best as always. Great job Keith and thank you !
Thanks for this! Great explanation on how OSPF works.
You are the hero I needed man! Thanks for this.
what a great and passionate explenation
WOW this is my first time viewing your videos and I must compliment you, the friendly and helpfull person you are has helped me understand the meaning of OSPF, i wil subscride and share your link.
Glad we could help, Andre! Thank you for learning with us.
Very helpful. Thanks for the refresh
Your videos are amazing. Thank you so much for sharing your insane depth of knowledge, in such a fun and simple way! I understood instantly concepts that I thought were really hard.
wonderful to listen and revise concepts, thanks
Keith is just best
I love this free content :p
Struggled with OSPF in my network course - Wish my teacher used props to make it so easy to understand.
So the reason OSPF is so fast at convergance is because it has all the routes cached? And RIP is slower because it does things on the fly?
Hello Paypre! Thanks for the question. OSPF is faster, as it has direct knowledge (from all the LSAs) for every network in the area. If there is a change or if an existing router goes down, the neighbors will know about that right away, and inform the rest of the routers in the area. With a distance vector routing protocol like RIP, that does not have formal neighborships, if a RIP router fails or goes away, it will be quite a while (after a timeout) before the rest of the network will remove those routes that are no longer available. Hope that helps, and happy studies.
i love your enthusiam!!
is this Jeremy I always followed back in 2010's !!!
man id love to have a beer or 6 with you!!! Thanks you are making this easy and fun!!
Great explanation💯
Legend. Very helpful
Great video i do have a question between area 0 and area 1 is that a BGP protocol between them?
Love it, thank you
Thanks Keith for the nugget. Could you please make a nugget on PPP and HDLC WAN protocols ?
We'll pass your request onto Keith! If you’re looking for some more info on WAN, we recommend checking out this skill: www.cbtnuggets.com/learn/it-training/wan-technologies
Thank you
A very informative one indeed
yes big boy Keith how's it hanging my G!
What if R8 wanted to send something to R1?
Spent 12mins staring at the guy on your left 🤣
This guy gives a mad scientist vibes. He needs an acting role.
I don't get it ?
top
3:46 bet you'd get way fucking more making horror movies...
I can tell you know what your talking about, but if someone is trying to follow, it would be helpful to slow down a bit.
Im lost
中国的老师学学,人家形象生动多了,别老是讲PPT了😅
Cheif. You speak too fast. Chew many of your words and this makes it hard to follow you.
Just go head and watch one of your videos.
Way too complicated.
My Channel Nickname: OSPFG
What You Used: OSPF (No G)
thank you