Thanks for sharing Richard. Wonderful conceptual planning discussion. Great visual aids (the drawings). Too often we dive right-in installing switches, routers, VoIP without taking a pause before hand to consider what we want the end result to look like.
When you use the services of third party's; you are not managing the servers or keeping it secure. The provider is responsible for it to be up and running 24/7. Otherwise when you host it self you should take care of these mentioned points. Greetings,
I know this is a nearly year old question. It all depends on the needs and budget of the business in question. Even though dedicated connections are expensive, you get more control over the network especially when you have many remote offices. You also typically get dedicated tech support and priority support if there's anything wrong with the circuit. But as I said, it depends on the needs of the business. A small mom and pop coffee shop with a few locations won't benefit from a dedicated connection. However, if you're talking about a large, multi-national business with many offices across the world or otherwise large companies with many branch offices, it does become important to have dedicated connections. I work in school IT support. We have 21 sites - 18 schools and 3 offices. They're all connected to a main datacenter via an AT&T metro Ethernet connection. I don't fully understand all the details, but we basically have layer 2 access to all of our devices across the district .
A service provider is just nothing more or less then a different company which has a core business of selling services such as; mailserver (mailservices), File server ('doc' in the video), phone server, webserver (services to host your website) and many more. In this case you pay a different company and they give you for example a quick webserver panel where you can put your website files in. This means that you do not do anything technical to get te server up and running. Another example is a mailserver. You buy a domain name (domainexample.com) and storage You get a panel and can create email account such as; name1@domainexample.dom, name2@domainexample.com, etc.
Hell yes!!! A simple visual on small network building.
really helpful dude , explained my entire exam of a network in so much basic detail in only 12 mins :)
ha ha, glad it helped!
Appreciate you. I got a better understanding .
You wouldn't believe how much this video helped me!! thanks so much and such a great explanation!
Great. You rock. Plz make more like solutions architects or networking cencept
Awesome
You've unknowingly changed my life for good. Your videos are awesome. Never stop making videos. You've helped a lot of people like us. God bless you!
Thank you, for an amazing video
Excellent video and overview! Love this.
Thanks for sharing Richard. Wonderful conceptual planning discussion. Great visual aids (the drawings). Too often we dive right-in installing switches, routers, VoIP without taking a pause before hand to consider what we want the end result to look like.
nice presentation but next time raise your voice
Hey Richard , that was a clear view of the concept (y).
I need help to learn how to setup basic IT infrastructure.
It was very helpful. Thank you
Very nice overview.
Thanks a lot for a lucid explanation.
Very clear video - excellent
Thank you!. I am one of a visual learner.. [This is very helpful = Subscribed]
This was really good, thanks alot sir
thanks for the great video.
4:19 I want to ask, suppose London to New York can be connected in a private network. whether it will lease fiber optic from a telecom company?
Good job!
Very nicely explained, only voice is low other than your efforts is 100%
0:40 What is sense you host those locally or through external provider?
When you use the services of third party's; you are not managing the servers or keeping it secure. The provider is responsible for it to be up and running 24/7. Otherwise when you host it self you should take care of these mentioned points. Greetings,
Hey Papa you were awesome
Very clear and declarative explanations, but I can barely hear you.
Great video! Why would someone choose the private network over the VPN if it costs more?
I know this is a nearly year old question. It all depends on the needs and budget of the business in question. Even though dedicated connections are expensive, you get more control over the network especially when you have many remote offices. You also typically get dedicated tech support and priority support if there's anything wrong with the circuit.
But as I said, it depends on the needs of the business. A small mom and pop coffee shop with a few locations won't benefit from a dedicated connection. However, if you're talking about a large, multi-national business with many offices across the world or otherwise large companies with many branch offices, it does become important to have dedicated connections. I work in school IT support. We have 21 sites - 18 schools and 3 offices. They're all connected to a main datacenter via an AT&T metro Ethernet connection. I don't fully understand all the details, but we basically have layer 2 access to all of our devices across the district .
Where is the switch its a heart of network ??
Thank you!!!
Thanks!
6:20 What is exactly service provider is?
A service provider is just nothing more or less then a different company which has a core business of selling services such as; mailserver (mailservices), File server ('doc' in the video), phone server, webserver (services to host your website) and many more. In this case you pay a different company and they give you for example a quick webserver panel where you can put your website files in. This means that you do not do anything technical to get te server up and running. Another example is a mailserver. You buy a domain name (domainexample.com) and storage You get a panel and can create email account such as; name1@domainexample.dom, name2@domainexample.com, etc.
Other time more volume sir
what happens if all company data is lost. Is this the task of IT discover recovery?
Fred Armisen ?
voice a little loud please
cannot hear... very low volume
your voice is very low ,almost inaudible !!!!
Can’t hear it!
sound is too low, muffled.