Passed my CCNA 2 days ago, with your help, Jeremy! Thank you for all that you do, and I'm jumping right into CCNP ENCOR studies with you! Feeling very optimistic towards the future.
@@mazenlatif6722 They have to sign a nondisclosure paper when they take the exam. CCNA is very strict on their testing. I heard someone had to retake the exam because their head went "out of frame" for a portion of the test. The test itself is very fair with its questioning, but they will challenge all that you know about networking.
As I prepare for the CCNA exam, I have been actively following your videos. I have obtained a job offer in enterprise tech support. I am filled with confidence and optimism about my CCNA, thanks to your videos. I will spread the word to my peers!
Hey Jeremy, legend as usual, I have 3 more days till my CCNA exam and this is a good refresher. Thought you should know that on Quiz 2 question there's a typo mistake at the last subnet shown : 192.168.13.0/24 instead the correct subnet of 192.168.3.0/24. Hope you had a good Christmas! I'll come back with updates after my exam on Friday!
Good luck on the exam, Lucian! Thanks for your support :) And thanks for pointing out that mistake...fortunately the actual routes are correct! I wish TH-cam let me update videos to fix small errors like this :/
Noticed the same. I'm 4 weeks away from taking the CCNA 200-301 exam and become a certified Network Engineer ❤. Thanks for investing the time on creating such A-graded network content, and better yet, at no cost at all. Mary Christmas 🎉
still working on it.. I needed to watch that video 3-4 times, in case anyone is experiencing the same.. just keep trying, take notes and ask chatgpt, plus its little bit harder for me since english ist not my native language, dont give up guys
I've got some experience as both a network technician and as a network engineer, with a lot of trial and error learning on the job, but it's nice having this stuff finally, properly explained to me! Thanks so much!
*## THIS VIDEO WAS ADDED IN 2022 AS AN UPDATE TO THE COURSE ##* Day 11 of the course used to have 1 lecture video, but I remade it and split it into two parts: Part 1 - Routing Fundamentals (this video) Part 2 - Static Routing: th-cam.com/video/YCv4-_sMvYE/w-d-xo.html Part 1 covers basics like how to view the routing table, Connected routes, Local routes, and route selection (most specific matching route). Part 2 covers how to configure static routes, giving a router the ability to forward packets toward destinations that are outside of the router's own connected networks. Old Day 11 video: th-cam.com/video/M7F_ljN0IdA/w-d-xo.html
this is the best platform to learn and gain the knowledge from real professional. Dear Jeremy , you expained everything in a best way and really appreciate that you are providing this platform free to the world and GOD BLESS YOU...
Love your vids so far! Just a heads up: at 11:53, you refer to the /32 route as "the connected route", even though it's also labeled as the local route further up in the graphic.
These videos are made as if Jeremy got into my head and found out what questions I would be having when I'm watching them. I would be thinking of a question and next thing I know Jeremy already has a detailed explanation for that question. Amazing work, Jeremy. I can't thank you enough and appreciate these videos so much!
I am really happy, I do not know how to gather my words to say thank you. I am going to pass my exam in a very young age and that is because of your helpful videos
thank you very much I am going through a complicated time because of depression I am happy to learn new things this is what proves to me that I am not dead yet and I hope that it will be useful for me
I’ve been in the IT industry for 5 years now and in the future I aim to transition to a network engineer role. I’ve got 2 years as an IT ops analyst and I work in Cisco CLI every day but still there are those cases that have to go to the engineers at the next level up because of knowledge gap or clear decision rights/comparative/absolute advantage. My work is going to sponsor me to take CCNA soon. This has been really good material so far, the best I’ve found. Thanks Jeremy! This is the first time I’ve had an understanding of routing to this level, and I gotta say, I’m hooked! Can’t wait to learn more.
At the beginning of the video when you said "this concept is very important for this course I thought it was going to be something hard. But you made it far easier to understand!
I didn't pass my CCNA exam but also didn't watch the entire series either so I blame myself but the information you have provided is good. You really break this down in terms that I can understand and digest. I plan to take the exam again in 90 day and this time I will watch all the videos LOL Thanks again
Hi Jereny ; I am very glade to inform you that, with the help of your marvelous lectures ,today i have passed my CCNA Exame in first attampt ,without any other material . Thanks a lot .
Thanks a lot for these amazing videos Jeremy! You are a Godsend! A little correction. At 00:11:48 it says Even though R1's G0/2 is configured as 192.168.1.1/24, the connected route is to 192.168.1.1/32. Instead of connected route it should be local route. Thanks again.
This particular video on this particular day is a big coincidence. I was just studying the original Day 11 video, my head was spinning (using a router as a PC and configuring the gateway of last resort, is that a pc or router thing? We didn't use it in the lab) so I decide to read the comments and see you had remade this video only 1 hr ago at the time. Looking forward to Part 2 shortly. If I hadn't have procrastinated on Christmas and Boxing Day, I would have missed the updated videos.
it was weird and unclear at the beginning , a lot of information but after you broke well the subject and gave simpler and clear explanation , well done jeremy .
Only comment is, when you first mention "the Local route is to the specific interface on the device", reiterate that the Local route IS the router a couple times. Would help it click and sink in faster. At least for me lol Great video🙂
in quiz 2 the answer is wrong coz it should drop the packet assuming that its 192.168.13.0/24 but if it was wrong network address and you meant 3.0/24 then correct it well follow the most specific route with the longest prefix which is in the routing table specified with L local route 192.168.3.1/32 for it self! but honestly in real world it cant be like this at all that it says 192.168.13.0/24 subneted 2 masks 2 and under it shows different networks such as 192.168.3.0/24 for C and 192.168.3.25/32 for L route! idk how could it be showen if its on sim application i asume gns3 with such error, if it could be then gns3 has major flaw imo! but if you typed it just to show us examples only then yeah it explains all thank you sir for the most wonderful videos and making them for free for all, it helps alot but if you didnt get ccna exams as you said in the tutorials then i am wondering what do you have then ? encore? ..etc just curious sir its okay if you dont want to tell us ^^ again thank you very much and greetings from Yemen without you i wont have any chance to learn and prepair for exams for the future if i could afford it but hope so
I think I understand the local/connected part of 'how'... But 'WHY', does a router need to receive a packet destined for itself? As in, what does a router do with a packet its going to itself de-encapsulate? Does this mean the packet is going to de-encapsulate on layers further up the OSI stack? Is the router actually processing information outside of its layer 3 function?
Good question 🤔 think of it when you're trying to do the entire configurations and you wants the router to have a correct set up local route along with the LANs networks connected to that router. Then you wants to test the connection by send a ICMP ping message to the router.
I noticed a possible error at 11:44, when speaking about the Local route. The text in the slide states: "Even though R1's G0/2 is configured as 192.168.1.1/24, the connected route is to 192.168.1.1/32. However, the audio says "the local route is to 192.168.1.1/32". Maybe not that big of a deal, but since I'm still learning, I got confused haha. Thank you again for the awesome videos!
Are you tired of encountering the dreaded "destination host unreachable" error? Fear not, for Jeremy is here to save the day! In the latest issue of Jeremy's Laboratory, our hero faces his most terrifying challenge yet - a villainous network error that threatens to bring down the entire system. But Jeremy isn't one to back down from a fight. Armed with his trusty knowledge of static routes, he sets out to track down the source of the problem and put an end to the dest-unreachable terror. As Jeremy delves deeper into the issue, he discovers the true power of static routes and how they can save us from the clutches of network villains. He also "routes" us to a better understanding of how these powerful tools can be used to navigate the complex world of networking. So don't miss out on the latest issue of Jeremy's Laboratory as our hero fights to keep your network running smoothly and "route" you to a better, more connected future. Pick up your copy today and join the adventure!
Jeremy, in 11:36, you say "... the local route is to 192.168.1.1/32" but it's written "... the connected route is to 192.168.1.1/32" I presume the correct is local route ?
Guys I am learning for my exam. Will do the the exam in a couple of months. Just wondering the guys who already got the ccna, how is your job search going? Please share if you got a job in the field. It would be an inspiration for us guys
I think you a mistake in your slide @11:44 where it reads "Even though R1's G0/2 is configured as 192.168.1.1/24, the connected route is to 192.168.1.1/32" In my opinion it should read "Even though R1's G0/2 is configured as 192.168.1.1/24, the local route is to 192.168.1.1/32"
Hi. you mentioned that the two types of routes L and C are automatically added when you configure an ip address and enable it. Why is L not appearing in the routing table. Advise was doing the same lab in GNS3.
The wrap up to this at @22:19, isn't the logic more like to reach destinations in X network, send the packet out matching router interface (dust hands) and let the next device handle the rest? Because isn't that all the router technically does? it focuses on the next hop connected to that interface and then "job done". It's not thinking about what the next router is going to do.
In the quiz 2 the subnet is 192.168.13.0/24, but C: 192.168.3.0/24 L: 192.168.3.25/32 is it possible that the subnet is x.x.13.x and C and L are x.x.3.x?
11:45 In the text "Eventhough R1's G0/2 is configured as 192.168.1.1/24, the connected route is to 192.168.1.1/32." Does the "connected route" actually meant "local route"?
Are those new videos updated as well on the Udemy course, just wondering because I have bought the course and would be cool as well to have the course updated. Amazing job as always Jerymy!
@@JeremysITLab okay, you're doing a great Job Jeremy. I was able to pass my CCNA solely because of your CCNA free course. Thank you so much. By the way, do you have any company in mind I can start my Networking Job with? Companies that uses Cisco Networking Devices I mean. Looking forward to hearing from you 😀
First of all, thank you. I had difficulty comparing the numbers you say and the numbers written, for example in timing. 17:46 in the routing table, there are two routes to subnets that fit within the 192.168.1.0/24 class C network, with twi different netmasks (/24and /32) but you say class A network Maybe I lost focus I need your help
Hello jeremy and every one reading this comment , am about to take my ccna exam and am studying based on your videos only and i was wondering if it's enough? ...am lookong forward to answer my question or any one who took the exam please
Hi Jeremy! I am a bit late to this video, but I was wondering, for the quiz 2 portion you have the IP 192.168.13.0/24, is it right for the IP to be a 3 instead of a 13 for the C and L?
On this video you see how many people have dropped their hopes just looking at how many likes it has...hehehe...Thanks man for all this info you are sharing...thanks!!!
Thanks Jeremy. I wanted to ask which lab simulator do you recommend to use in studying for ccna exam draw between packet tracer and gns3 but I've been told that packet tracer is limited unlike gns3
Passed my CCNA 2 days ago, with your help, Jeremy! Thank you for all that you do, and I'm jumping right into CCNP ENCOR studies with you! Feeling very optimistic towards the future.
Congratulations, may I ask you if there was a lot of lab questions in the exam and how hard were they .
Congrats on the pass, Mark! Well done :)
@@mazenlatif6722 They have to sign a nondisclosure paper when they take the exam. CCNA is very strict on their testing. I heard someone had to retake the exam because their head went "out of frame" for a portion of the test. The test itself is very fair with its questioning, but they will challenge all that you know about networking.
Hey, congrats !!! I hope you catch you soon !!!
How long did you study for?
Just passed my CCNA and i can't thank you enough.
What was your method studying for the exam!
@@souljatomi4575 you found a better method yet fam ?
@@neglectburi7320 nah u can share if u want
what was on the test?
@@mr.unknown4914questions
Passed my CCNA last week. Thanks for your videos. They helped me pass.
As I prepare for the CCNA exam, I have been actively following your videos. I have obtained a job offer in enterprise tech support. I am filled with confidence and optimism about my CCNA, thanks to your videos. I will spread the word to my peers!
Hey Jeremy, legend as usual, I have 3 more days till my CCNA exam and this is a good refresher.
Thought you should know that on Quiz 2 question there's a typo mistake at the last subnet shown : 192.168.13.0/24 instead the correct subnet of 192.168.3.0/24.
Hope you had a good Christmas!
I'll come back with updates after my exam on Friday!
Good luck on the exam, Lucian! Thanks for your support :)
And thanks for pointing out that mistake...fortunately the actual routes are correct! I wish TH-cam let me update videos to fix small errors like this :/
awesome glad I am not he only one that noticed this it was making me question everything I have learned so far haha
@@JeremysITLab couldn't you just reupload? :D
Noticed the same. I'm 4 weeks away from taking the CCNA 200-301 exam and become a certified Network Engineer ❤.
Thanks for investing the time on creating such A-graded network content, and better yet, at no cost at all. Mary Christmas 🎉
🤔
still working on it.. I needed to watch that video 3-4 times, in case anyone is experiencing the same.. just keep trying, take notes and ask chatgpt, plus its little bit harder for me since english ist not my native language, dont give up guys
UPDATE
PASSED!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@@lRetM wow congratulations. Any tips?
@@adegbiteanjolaoluwa999 Just hang in there
what was on the test?
I've got some experience as both a network technician and as a network engineer, with a lot of trial and error learning on the job, but it's nice having this stuff finally, properly explained to me! Thanks so much!
*## THIS VIDEO WAS ADDED IN 2022 AS AN UPDATE TO THE COURSE ##*
Day 11 of the course used to have 1 lecture video, but I remade it and split it into two parts:
Part 1 - Routing Fundamentals (this video)
Part 2 - Static Routing: th-cam.com/video/YCv4-_sMvYE/w-d-xo.html
Part 1 covers basics like how to view the routing table, Connected routes, Local routes, and route selection (most specific matching route).
Part 2 covers how to configure static routes, giving a router the ability to forward packets toward destinations that are outside of the router's own connected networks.
Old Day 11 video: th-cam.com/video/M7F_ljN0IdA/w-d-xo.html
Can you please provide pdf of the classes
The Videos are really amazing , day by day videos made me get organized and study every day! Appreciate it
Thanks for the time you put him. These are very helpful videos
Ahhhh, this explains why my old notes was lacking a lot of things. Thank you! :)
this is the best platform to learn and gain the knowledge from real professional. Dear Jeremy , you expained everything in a best way and really appreciate that you are providing this platform free to the world and GOD BLESS YOU...
My god, there is so much information in these videos that I'm able to get 5 full pages of notes out of each of them. Thank you so much Jeremy
I agree there is a lot of info, but the most notes I have ever gotten is 1.5 pages. Then again I am typing my notes and really condense them
Love your vids so far! Just a heads up: at 11:53, you refer to the /32 route as "the connected route", even though it's also labeled as the local route further up in the graphic.
These videos are made as if Jeremy got into my head and found out what questions I would be having when I'm watching them. I would be thinking of a question and next thing I know Jeremy already has a detailed explanation for that question. Amazing work, Jeremy. I can't thank you enough and appreciate these videos so much!
Thank you for clarifying 26:29 in the description. I was so confused why .3.0 was showing under .13.0
I am really happy, I do not know how to gather my words to say thank you. I am going to pass my exam in a very young age and that is because of your helpful videos
The best explanation you will ever find on the network. Thanks Jeremy!
Thanks :)
Updated reccently?! Thats awesome. Jeremy could have easily left the course as is after completing it. Apreciate your work Jeremy!
thank you very much I am going through a complicated time because of depression I am happy to learn new things this is what proves to me that I am not dead yet and I hope that it will be useful for me
I’ve been in the IT industry for 5 years now and in the future I aim to transition to a network engineer role. I’ve got 2 years as an IT ops analyst and I work in Cisco CLI every day but still there are those cases that have to go to the engineers at the next level up because of knowledge gap or clear decision rights/comparative/absolute advantage. My work is going to sponsor me to take CCNA soon. This has been really good material so far, the best I’ve found. Thanks Jeremy! This is the first time I’ve had an understanding of routing to this level, and I gotta say, I’m hooked! Can’t wait to learn more.
Straight to the point Slides and icons become your easy to understand Jeremy thank you so much absolutely you are legend
Thanks, Abdirahman :)
Thanks!
Thanks so much for the tip! Sorry for the l very late reply, I just noticed this comment now. I appreciate your support :)
@@JeremysITLabbetter late than never ❤❤
At the beginning of the video when you said "this concept is very important for this course I thought it was going to be something hard. But you made it far easier to understand!
I've getting more into networking. You given the best simplest explanation for Routing Fundamentals!! Thank you!
Got me to become a subscriber.
Love that you gave a shoutout to everyone on that list! Respect earns respect
I didn't pass my CCNA exam but also didn't watch the entire series either so I blame myself but the information you have provided is good. You really break this down in terms that I can understand and digest. I plan to take the exam again in 90 day and this time I will watch all the videos LOL Thanks again
Hi Jereny ; I am very glade to inform you that, with the help of your marvelous lectures ,today i have passed my CCNA Exame in first attampt ,without any other material . Thanks a lot .
Did you only studied the videos, flash cards and Jermy labs? and how was the exam labs question?
Thanks a lot for these amazing videos Jeremy! You are a Godsend!
A little correction.
At 00:11:48 it says Even though R1's G0/2 is configured as 192.168.1.1/24, the connected route is to 192.168.1.1/32. Instead of connected route it should be local route. Thanks again.
i always feel happy when the quiz comes up, bc i stayed focus thru the whole video!
This particular video on this particular day is a big coincidence. I was just studying the original Day 11 video, my head was spinning (using a router as a PC and configuring the gateway of last resort, is that a pc or router thing? We didn't use it in the lab) so I decide to read the comments and see you had remade this video only 1 hr ago at the time. Looking forward to Part 2 shortly.
If I hadn't have procrastinated on Christmas and Boxing Day, I would have missed the updated videos.
Today's lesson: Don't hesitate to take time off around Christmas!
i got 3/5, not bad for me. I'll go back to this video. Already subscribed. I hope I can pass our exam next week
it was weird and unclear at the beginning , a lot of information but after you broke well the subject and gave simpler and clear explanation , well done jeremy .
Hey Jeremy,
thanks for this video. This video refreshed my knowledge on routing fundamentals. It's amazing you are making those videos.
Thanks mahn l just passed my ccna exam today...l was more than ready for it
Awesome training. Once you understand information just gets brighter
Incredible content, Thanks very much for the course, It´s been a while that I´m studying from different sources and this one is the best so far!!!
This video was WAY easier than day 10's!!
Thank you so much for simplifing the process, your teaching style is really clear and practical!
This is such a well made video series! Enjoy every minute!
I already get my CCNA certificate Thank You So Much Jeremy for you free Course .
Congrats on the CCNA!
Only comment is, when you first mention "the Local route is to the specific interface on the device", reiterate that the Local route IS the router a couple times. Would help it click and sink in faster. At least for me lol Great video🙂
Now i am really thinking of getting my CCNA after this high quality lessons
in quiz 2 the answer is wrong coz it should drop the packet assuming that its 192.168.13.0/24 but if it was wrong network address and you meant 3.0/24 then correct it well follow the most specific route with the longest prefix which is in the routing table specified with L local route 192.168.3.1/32 for it self! but honestly in real world it cant be like this at all that it says 192.168.13.0/24 subneted 2 masks 2 and under it shows different networks such as 192.168.3.0/24 for C and 192.168.3.25/32 for L route! idk how could it be showen if its on sim application i asume gns3 with such error, if it could be then gns3 has major flaw imo! but if you typed it just to show us examples only then yeah it explains all
thank you sir for the most wonderful videos and making them for free for all, it helps alot
but if you didnt get ccna exams as you said in the tutorials then i am wondering what do you have then ? encore? ..etc just curious sir its okay if you dont want to tell us ^^
again thank you very much and greetings from Yemen without you i wont have any chance to learn and prepair for exams for the future if i could afford it but hope so
It's a typo, but it doesn't change the answer. "x.x.x.x/x is variably subnetted" isn't a route
First like, was actually studying for the ccna when this video was uploaded, thanks Jeremy IT
I'm completing your ccna course & its really effective
Thanks for adding Summaries too, it's really nice, although i started making notes, but if i missed any, i could write it down.
Getting ready to take my CCNA cert exam, this is so helpful thanks!
Day 11 (part 1) was awesome! Thank you Jeremy!
This was an easy lesson today. needed it after the Layer 3 header lesson yesterday.
I think I understand the local/connected part of 'how'... But 'WHY', does a router need to receive a packet destined for itself? As in, what does a router do with a packet its going to itself de-encapsulate? Does this mean the packet is going to de-encapsulate on layers further up the OSI stack? Is the router actually processing information outside of its layer 3 function?
Good question 🤔 think of it when you're trying to do the entire configurations and you wants the router to have a correct set up local route along with the LANs networks connected to that router. Then you wants to test the connection by send a ICMP ping message to the router.
You are awesome, thank you for all you do and these great videos. Literally gold.
simply your are the best to guide forward to the right track to educate and get myself the better place,tyou are the best Jeremy
I noticed a possible error at 11:44, when speaking about the Local route. The text in the slide states: "Even though R1's G0/2 is configured as 192.168.1.1/24, the connected route is to 192.168.1.1/32. However, the audio says "the local route is to 192.168.1.1/32". Maybe not that big of a deal, but since I'm still learning, I got confused haha. Thank you again for the awesome videos!
Your video is really deep teaching any topic thank u so much i am now following all ccna topics from your videos😊
Jeremy I love the tutorial it’s helping me to prepare for my exam. Is it possible if you can share the sides please ❤❤
hi jeremy thx for THIS GIFT TIME TO ME TO WISH A MAGIC NEW YEAR FOR U AND FOR ALL PEOPLE THAT U LOVE FROM ALGERIA KEEP GOING AND GIVIN
One of the simple explanations I have got regarding the codes L& C..thank you
Errata
17:42 it's Class "C" (in your lecture you said "A", but ppt has correct)
You are heaven sent sir!
11:42 it's actually "local route" but the text their is as "connected route", last bullet point of local route explaination
Jeremy is absolute Legend.
Awesome video, well explained and you made it so much easier to understand, subscribed and liked!
26:47 the ip address should be 3.0/24 not 13.0/24. i was confused
I found the route-selection practice helpful. Thank you.
Are you tired of encountering the dreaded "destination host unreachable" error? Fear not, for Jeremy is here to save the day! In the latest issue of Jeremy's Laboratory, our hero faces his most terrifying challenge yet - a villainous network error that threatens to bring down the entire system.
But Jeremy isn't one to back down from a fight. Armed with his trusty knowledge of static routes, he sets out to track down the source of the problem and put an end to the dest-unreachable terror.
As Jeremy delves deeper into the issue, he discovers the true power of static routes and how they can save us from the clutches of network villains. He also "routes" us to a better understanding of how these powerful tools can be used to navigate the complex world of networking.
So don't miss out on the latest issue of Jeremy's Laboratory as our hero fights to keep your network running smoothly and "route" you to a better, more connected future. Pick up your copy today and join the adventure!
Tremendous helpful & free video resources ever for CCNA 200-301 😊
Hey Jeremy, can you do a video on BGP I know it’s not one of the topics on the CCNA but would still be good learn in detail.
I'm sorry, 26:30 isn't there a error about 192.168.13.0/24 maybe it had to be 192.168.3.0/24 ?
For some reason my membership has cancelled as I previously seen. I just immediantly renewed it again!
Thanks for the support Owad! Your name is on many of the upcoming ENCOR videos ;)
Hi Jeremy,
Thank you for the video.
Are you still making videos for CCNA? I thought your CCNA course was complete.
Thank you!
He said in the comments that this is an update :)
Yep, just an update/improvement to the course
@@JeremysITLab Keep them coming 😄
Thank you so much!
Hi
Thanks for such a amazing content, enjoying the course
Can you please help us get the slides of these videos?
Great Teacher ❤
Jeremy, in 11:36, you say "... the local route is to 192.168.1.1/32" but it's written "... the connected route is to 192.168.1.1/32" I presume the correct is local route ?
Guys I am learning for my exam. Will do the the exam in a couple of months. Just wondering the guys who already got the ccna, how is your job search going? Please share if you got a job in the field. It would be an inspiration for us guys
Thank you Jeremy! I love you!!!
Another amazing lecture
I think you a mistake in your slide @11:44 where it reads
"Even though R1's G0/2 is configured as 192.168.1.1/24, the connected route is to 192.168.1.1/32"
In my opinion it should read
"Even though R1's G0/2 is configured as 192.168.1.1/24, the local route is to 192.168.1.1/32"
Hi. you mentioned that the two types of routes L and C are automatically added when you configure an ip address and enable it. Why is L not appearing in the routing table. Advise was doing the same lab in GNS3.
The wrap up to this at @22:19, isn't the logic more like to reach destinations in X network, send the packet out matching router interface (dust hands) and let the next device handle the rest? Because isn't that all the router technically does? it focuses on the next hop connected to that interface and then "job done". It's not thinking about what the next router is going to do.
In the quiz 2 the subnet is 192.168.13.0/24, but
C: 192.168.3.0/24
L: 192.168.3.25/32
is it possible that the subnet is x.x.13.x and C and L are x.x.3.x?
I saw this, I believe it was a typo. The network is 192.168.13.0/24 so the addresses of the remaining routes should have .13 instead of .3
Thank you so much for such a wonderful explanations.💌 You are the best !💯
Thanks to the Mother ofNature that gifted you.
Thank you so much Jeremy! You made this topic easier. 😁
11:45 In the text "Eventhough R1's G0/2 is configured as 192.168.1.1/24, the connected route is to 192.168.1.1/32." Does the "connected route" actually meant "local route"?
Plz add more interactive quizzes with score options
Arigato Sensei Jeremy!
Seriously... can't express ENOUGH how much we all appreciate the work you've put in to these videos.
THANK YOU!!
Are those new videos updated as well on the Udemy course, just wondering because I have bought the course and would be cool as well to have the course updated. Amazing job as always Jerymy!
Yep! I uploaded both videos to Udemy last week :)
Thought Jeremy has covered this particular topic before 🤔
I have! This is just an update/improvement to it
@@JeremysITLab okay, you're doing a great Job Jeremy.
I was able to pass my CCNA solely because of your CCNA free course. Thank you so much.
By the way, do you have any company in mind I can start my Networking Job with? Companies that uses Cisco Networking Devices I mean.
Looking forward to hearing from you 😀
First of all, thank you.
I had difficulty comparing the numbers you say and the numbers written, for example in timing. 17:46
in the routing table, there are two routes to subnets that fit within the 192.168.1.0/24 class C network, with twi different netmasks (/24and /32)
but you say class A network
Maybe I lost focus I need your help
I’m really happy, i used this serie videos to study for mi certificate and pass.
This Thursday I passed this examen
Thank you Jeremy✨
Hello jeremy and every one reading this comment , am about to take my ccna exam and am studying based on your videos only and i was wondering if it's enough? ...am lookong forward to answer my question or any one who took the exam please
Hey Jeremy thank you for this wonderful playlist. At 17:45 you say "Class A" but it's a Class C right ?
Again thank you so much
Yes I was going to write about same but I haven't found any comment on that thanks David for pointing that out and ya that is of class C.
Hi Jeremy thanks for video please I need more video for ether channel L2 & L3
best regard
Thanks so much!!! passing because of you!
11:38 there's a typo. connected route should be local route.
I was just about to say the same thing, he says it at 11:42.
Good content though, I'm loving the course. Thank you.
Hi Jeremy! I am a bit late to this video, but I was wondering, for the quiz 2 portion you have the IP 192.168.13.0/24, is it right for the IP to be a 3 instead of a 13 for the C and L?
im curious about this as well.
Another wonderful video!
Thank you jeremy for sharing this knowledge.
On this video you see how many people have dropped their hopes just looking at how many likes it has...hehehe...Thanks man for all this info you are sharing...thanks!!!
Thanks Jeremy. I wanted to ask which lab simulator do you recommend to use in studying for ccna exam draw between packet tracer and gns3 but I've been told that packet tracer is limited unlike gns3
Packet Tracer is good enough for CCNA! And GNS3 isn't free because you have to buy the IOS images from Cisco to us them (legally).
thank you so much, your lectures are the best
i have a question at Quiz 3. If SW can't find MAC destination, what would it do ?. Thanks for the answers
thanks jeremys you are an awesome teacher.
is there a way to get anki flash cards for new comers like me?