Here's a mnemonic I came up with for the 802.11 wireless network standards for anyone else that might be struggling with this: 2.4 GHz networks: b, g, n, ax (Bears Go Near AXes) 5 GHz networks: a, n, ac, ax (Angry Nerds ACquire AXes) this won't help with the speeds but just knowing which ones support 2.4GHz and which ones support 5GHz should help with a couple of questions. Good luck to anyone taking the exam in the future! And thanks for posting this video Vincent, I found it really helpful to hear your thought process.
/30 means the first six bits of the last octet on, meaning all 1.There fore the magic number is 252. Block size is 256-252=4. The first subnet is 0 The second is 4 The third is 8 The fourth is 12 Therefore the answer is A
Dude. The first question... you're killing me. In a point to point subnet or /30 there are 4 addresses. The 1st is the Network ID, the last is the broadcast, and the middle 2 get assigned. So start from 0. 0-3, 4-7, 8-11, 12-15. The answer is .12 because it is the 1st addresses in this range.
@@zombiemitsu to find out the hosts per subnet, use formula (2^n) - 2, where n represents the number of host bits left over in the octet in which network bits are being borrowed. The subtraction of 2 addresses happens because there is an address reserved for Host ID and another for the Broadcast Address, but they're still technically a part of the address block per subnet - that's how Jeff got his 4 addresses
@@ClockinLoot best advice is study very broadly. do the practice exams from many companies, review tons of quizlets. The more broad your knowledge base and skill at reading questions and figuring out answers the better. Also be prepared to identify all the types of hacks/attacks from command line looking info.
I found Dion's questions to be harder than the exam itself. Most of it is the wording, but I do feel that Dion makes them harder on here, so that we succeed at the test. He is a certified instructor, so he's got some inside knowledge, unlike Messer who creates great material, but adds in a lot of extra content. Not sure why Messer does that, but if he was a certified instructor, I would use more of his stuff, but then it would probably not be free on YT lol.
@@Antassium i passed but i didn’t think I did. That test was very tough. I was stressed and sweating the whole time and I used up the entire time limit.
Lol i've taken these tests a few times for practice. I always get no6 wrong but I finally get why the answer is trunking- If the individual port is configured as a trunk port, it simply cant be used as an access port. You cant plug in a workstation into it and expect it to work- it wont be able to access DHCP, it wont be able to do anything. Its expecting another switch, not a workstation. So if a workstation gets an APIPA address and cant access the gateway, its possible that the port its plugged into is set up as a trunked port, and it should work if you just plug it into another port
This is one of the so called super difficult exams that dion is notorious for? These are honestly not bad at all lol. If this is supposed to be harder than the exam itself I'm all set man!
@@vincenthumble They were the error condition questions. I had pretty much the same reaction you had when reading those for the first time. Thanks for the videos man!
@@CaptainTasty1 I also didn't get any questions related to error levels questions in the actual exam. But these kind of questions are more of a Cisco CCNA type questions. CCNA is more in depth. You will only encounter this error levels when working with routers and switches.
I did pass :) You can hear more about that here th-cam.com/video/IozTC-i8GKo/w-d-xo.html Jason Dion's test was fairly accurate. There were only 2-3 questions that were irrelevant and the difficulty was comparable. I would say the actual Net+ exam was just a teensy bit harder.
I studied CCNA and most of the questions are very familiar to me like I can take this exam without studying. I'm tempted to take the exam. Did you take the Network Plus exam yet? How did it go? How similar are the questions to the actual exam?
The material is the same, but these questions are a little bit easier. I think if you studied for the CCNS and you have a good grasp of network fundamentals, you could pass this test.
@@vincenthumble I'm gonna try and risk my $360 this week and do the online exam. I might just do some basic readings. Do you recommend any source material?
Here's a mnemonic I came up with for the 802.11 wireless network standards for anyone else that might be struggling with this:
2.4 GHz networks: b, g, n, ax (Bears Go Near AXes)
5 GHz networks: a, n, ac, ax (Angry Nerds ACquire AXes)
this won't help with the speeds but just knowing which ones support 2.4GHz and which ones support 5GHz should help with a couple of questions.
Good luck to anyone taking the exam in the future! And thanks for posting this video Vincent, I found it really helpful to hear your thought process.
Dude that is extremely helpful!! Thank you!!
Also, to remember for which 802.11 that can do both 2.4 and 5 is (An Axe!) aka “N Ax”
/30 means the first six bits of the last octet on, meaning all 1.There fore the magic number is 252.
Block size is 256-252=4.
The first subnet is 0
The second is 4
The third is 8
The fourth is 12
Therefore the answer is A
if anybody struggles with the first question watch the subnetting by hand video by Jason, you can work it out in seconds.
Dude. The first question... you're killing me. In a point to point subnet or /30 there are 4 addresses. The 1st is the Network ID, the last is the broadcast, and the middle 2 get assigned.
So start from 0. 0-3, 4-7, 8-11, 12-15. The answer is .12 because it is the 1st addresses in this range.
How is it 4 addresses
@@zombiemitsu to find out the hosts per subnet, use formula (2^n) - 2, where n represents the number of host bits left over in the octet in which network bits are being borrowed. The subtraction of 2 addresses happens because there is an address reserved for Host ID and another for the Broadcast Address, but they're still technically a part of the address block per subnet - that's how Jeff got his 4 addresses
I'm about to take he network+ exam but i'm feeling unprepared. Your vids are helping a lot. Onto security+ after next week!
Nice job, Matthew! You got this :) Glad the videos are helpful!
how did it go??? was it hard?
@@ClockinLoot best advice is study very broadly. do the practice exams from many companies, review tons of quizlets. The more broad your knowledge base and skill at reading questions and figuring out answers the better. Also be prepared to identify all the types of hacks/attacks from command line looking info.
I found Dion's questions to be harder than the exam itself. Most of it is the wording, but I do feel that Dion makes them harder on here, so that we succeed at the test. He is a certified instructor, so he's got some inside knowledge, unlike Messer who creates great material, but adds in a lot of extra content. Not sure why Messer does that, but if he was a certified instructor, I would use more of his stuff, but then it would probably not be free on YT lol.
77 is pretty good! i try mine, i got 39 lol, it is my time do practical test after watching Jason Dion's video and completely closed book😂
I take my test Friday. Watching everything I can haha. Thank you!! You take tests like I do btw 😂
@jfisher164
How did it go?
@@Antassium i passed but i didn’t think I did. That test was very tough. I was stressed and sweating the whole time and I used up the entire time limit.
@jfisher164
I'm glad you passed!
Did you do well on the practice tests before hand?
Prepping is freaking me out 😅🤣
@@Antassium I did but just like other CompTIA tests, the real one is so much different haha.
Lol i've taken these tests a few times for practice. I always get no6 wrong but I finally get why the answer is trunking-
If the individual port is configured as a trunk port, it simply cant be used as an access port. You cant plug in a workstation into it and expect it to work- it wont be able to access DHCP, it wont be able to do anything. Its expecting another switch, not a workstation. So if a workstation gets an APIPA address and cant access the gateway, its possible that the port its plugged into is set up as a trunked port, and it should work if you just plug it into another port
This is exactly the type of video I needed, thank you for posting these!
You're so welcome!
Have you written the exam yet?
@@mgbeojiemmanuel1112 I passed
please post more of this!
Thanks, this was really helpful. Q80 appears to be related to the 7 Syslog Trap Levels..
How long do you have access to and how many times can you take Jason Dion's CompTia Net+ N10-008 6 Practice exams and Sims?
I haven't checked, but AFAIK it's unlimited for both!
This is one of the so called super difficult exams that dion is notorious for? These are honestly not bad at all lol. If this is supposed to be harder than the exam itself I'm all set man!
Answer of question 1 is 77.81.12.12. That ip falls in fourth subnet 77.81.12.12----------77.81.12.15.so network id of that Ip is obviously 77.81.12.12
#43 is not anywhere near the Net+ Exam Objectives right? Seems like a decent test to practice with but questions like that don't help at all.
What did that one say? I remember there was some content on here that surprised me.
Same with 80...
@@vincenthumble They were the error condition questions. I had pretty much the same reaction you had when reading those for the first time. Thanks for the videos man!
Ah yep that's exactly the question I was thinking of. Thanks for watching! 🙂
@@CaptainTasty1 I also didn't get any questions related to error levels questions in the actual exam. But these kind of questions are more of a Cisco CCNA type questions. CCNA is more in depth. You will only encounter this error levels when working with routers and switches.
Did you pass the Network+ and how accurate was Jason Dion's practice test to the real thing?
I did pass :) You can hear more about that here th-cam.com/video/IozTC-i8GKo/w-d-xo.html
Jason Dion's test was fairly accurate. There were only 2-3 questions that were irrelevant and the difficulty was comparable. I would say the actual Net+ exam was just a teensy bit harder.
Thanks for this Vincent!
Is this and Dion's other courses included with a Udemy subscription?
I'm not sure if they're included with a subscription as I've never used that service. I bought his Practice tests for about $15 one time fee
Bro you had me cracking up! Lol that's not terrible! It's a fail😢
45:01 nah it's probably ac.
5.0 -- a, ac
2.4 -- b, g
Bof -- n, ac
Q13: should be “successful WPS attack has occurred” since unknown devices gained access to network no?
The bot keeps marking all the comments on these questions as spam due to the numbers and dots lol
I studied CCNA and most of the questions are very familiar to me like I can take this exam without studying. I'm tempted to take the exam. Did you take the Network Plus exam yet? How did it go? How similar are the questions to the actual exam?
The material is the same, but these questions are a little bit easier. I think if you studied for the CCNS and you have a good grasp of network fundamentals, you could pass this test.
@@vincenthumble I'm gonna try and risk my $360 this week and do the online exam. I might just do some basic readings. Do you recommend any source material?
To be honest, I didn't do too much reading except for professor messers notes
Make sure to use a coupon
@@vincenthumble If that's the case, would you say that the exam is easier. Easier than this practice exam?
Great vid, but I feel like Jason Dion test are horrible. Super confusing and unclear
Fair enough. Thanks for watching!
S80: re syslog error codes/levels
Thank you. We appreciate your honest & *Humble* 😉 review.😊
I see what you did there
Q26 2x2x2=8 not 4
Thank you!
You're welcome! If you found this video helpful, I'm sure you'll enjoy some of my other Network+ content as well 🙂
@@vincenthumble will definitely check them out. Planning on taking my network+ soon.
bro went from question 25 to 36 how tf 1:22:12
time travel.. my bad. I haven't learned how to control my powers yet
😄😄😄
(I'm) BAG'N (the) AC, AX(e) let me nail those in an hour if anyone is looking for mnemonics. Thanks for this vid!