As a networking major graduate and professional whos been out of the field for a the last year and returning to the field this was a very good explanation/refresher and I understood everything flawlessy.
Hey Ed, thanks very much for this video. This is what I was looking for like forever. This video is the only of its kind on the whole internet! Yes the whole internet, till now! Thanks again! And waiting for :-)
where have I been? you made this so simple within 3 mins, the video could have ended there. what I mean is your explanation made it so easy. thanks man
Amazing, they never show you real life stuff when studying, only made up topologies and never physical stuff. I'd love to see what kind of IP addressing they use or at least how big the routing tables are. Thanks for this awesome video. Is there a way you could show something similar to your inside configurations? not the real IP addressing or routes of course but something similar to get a better picture?
dryduststorm Yeah, this was well explained but also kind of a unique walkthrough. I can't find refresher information like this. I used to do this kind of stuff a decade ago but was curious what has changed. Actually, I was never this good, ha.
Great demo! Thanks for that. Could you please suggest what are the qualifications/certifications/experience you might want to see in a prospective engineer to install/maintain all these stuffs?
Depends where you are in the world. There is Bicsi for the infrastructure (cabling, racks, power, cooling, etc). They are global but most strong in the US. Then there is CompTIA - again, global but big in the US. Vendor certifications (Cisco, etc.) seem to be popular everywhere. I would look at local job postings and see what they are asking for.
This is a good show and tell. I do have a question however, I noticed the Core router connect straight to the access switch, where does the distribution layer fit in this design? Is this a collapsed core where the Cisco and HP routers doubles as the Distribution Switch?
Yes, this was a small network so no distribution layer was needed/used. If memory serves, the show that year in Las Vegas did use distribution switches. Keep in mind this if 8 years old now. Still applies somewhat to enterprise networks, but if you want to learn about data centers you need to look at leaf/spine architectures.
Nice video.. but am seeing a single point of failure here. if the entire firewall is out, then the entire connectivity to the outside world is gone.. unless am not seeing something here...
Many thanks for ur video and ur efforts ,please help i need to ask you for top urgent case with me , what about performance of tp link enterprise model for school with below network for school whats about stability with poe Access point Access point controller Control ssid I will make 4 ssid in all school with vlan Vlan stable of not Poe is good or not Managed switches .be 32 switches poe 24 and 48 Core switches All work is nvr with 600 camera Systems & servers Cables will be cate 6a and fiber 100 classes User will be 6000 user Firewall will be sophos Recommend or not Many thanks in advance ☺️ 🙏 If u recommend this Which model number will be good and compatability with this operation Swtich and Access point
Aaron - this was almost a decade ago - and the configs were loaded by the vendors (HP and Cisco) - so can't really help you with config detail (and I imagine it would be dated)
Since their is only one link back to the WAN/Cisco side that dual HP Cores are useless... If the primary drops you loose more then 50% of your network...
Timothy Eckert - Actually, since there are two WAN links - one to the Cisco core and one to the HP core - and since the Cisco and HP cores are connected (not explained too well other than the diagram at the beginning) losing one would not lose 50% of the network BUT it would mean the core pair (Cisco or HP) that lost the WAN link would no longer have direct WAN access - traffic would be routed through the core with the remaining WAN link. Same goes if the core router (or port or card) with the WAN link connected to it fails
InteropNET is a temporary network - racks built up in a warehouse, shipped to an event hall, and assembled in a couple days. Runs for the duration of the show then is torn down. Cable management is not always a priority!
This video is a gem on RUclips.. only struggling networking beginners understand how difficult it is to find a video like this 🙏
As a networking major graduate and professional whos been out of the field for a the last year and returning to the field this was a very good explanation/refresher and I understood everything flawlessy.
Thank for this video. Showing the the way data transverse between each device and cable was great. Great explanation.
Hey Ed, thanks very much for this video. This is what I was looking for like forever. This video is the only of its kind on the whole internet! Yes the whole internet, till now!
Thanks again! And waiting for :-)
where have I been? you made this so simple within 3 mins, the video could have ended there. what I mean is your explanation made it so easy. thanks man
This was extremely instructive. Topped the other trying to be instructional videos. Yours was very instructive.
This was both very interesting and informative. Thank you for taking the time to put this video together.
That was an awesome explanation thank you..
Amazing, they never show you real life stuff when studying, only made up topologies and never physical stuff. I'd love to see what kind of IP addressing they use or at least how big the routing tables are. Thanks for this awesome video. Is there a way you could show something similar to your inside configurations? not the real IP addressing or routes of course but something similar to get a better picture?
I agree completely. Going beyond the standard 2D view of the topology is a great way to really piece together all that’s going on in a network.
Ed, Thanks mate. This is one of the best IT video's I have seen. You have no idea how refreshed I am having seen this. I owe you a beer. Steve
dryduststorm Yeah, this was well explained but also kind of a unique walkthrough. I can't find refresher information like this. I used to do this kind of stuff a decade ago but was curious what has changed. Actually, I was never this good, ha.
Please do more like this.
Many courses out there and none show me this. Thank you
awesome and clearly explained Enterprise Network
perfect Explanation thank you very much helped me a lot
Great demo! Thanks for that. Could you please suggest what are the qualifications/certifications/experience you might want to see in a prospective engineer to install/maintain all these stuffs?
Depends where you are in the world. There is Bicsi for the infrastructure (cabling, racks, power, cooling, etc). They are global but most strong in the US. Then there is CompTIA - again, global but big in the US. Vendor certifications (Cisco, etc.) seem to be popular everywhere. I would look at local job postings and see what they are asking for.
Very good video.Thank you !! PLease do more video's like this.
Thanks for this video, it was just what I was looking for.
Thanks a lot, my teacher showed all the theory but it was hard to understand how it is in real life
Great Video. Wish you did more hard to find videos without the theory to practicals.
2021 from core,distribution, access to spine and leaf
This is a good show and tell. I do have a question however, I noticed the Core router connect straight to the access switch, where does the distribution layer fit in this design? Is this a collapsed core where the Cisco and HP routers doubles as the Distribution Switch?
Yes, this was a small network so no distribution layer was needed/used. If memory serves, the show that year in Las Vegas did use distribution switches. Keep in mind this if 8 years old now. Still applies somewhat to enterprise networks, but if you want to learn about data centers you need to look at leaf/spine architectures.
@@edgstl64 Thanks for the info, I appreciate it.
Nice video.. but am seeing a single point of failure here. if the entire firewall is out, then the entire connectivity to the outside world is gone.. unless am not seeing something here...
thank you so much
Nice video 👌
I just wish I can get more of this
Good video
+ Ed Gastle hey man thanks learnt a lot from this vid, please do some more vids like this!!!
Please create more network videos
Many thanks for ur video and ur efforts ,please help
i need to ask you for top urgent case with me , what about performance of tp link enterprise model for school with below network for school whats about stability with poe
Access point
Access point controller
Control ssid I will make 4 ssid in all school with vlan
Vlan stable of not
Poe is good or not
Managed switches .be 32 switches poe 24 and 48
Core switches
All work is nvr with 600 camera
Systems & servers
Cables will be cate 6a and fiber
100 classes
User will be 6000 user
Firewall will be sophos
Recommend or not
Many thanks in advance ☺️ 🙏
If u recommend this
Which model number will be good and compatability with this operation
Swtich and Access point
hello! what are the configs that you put on routers and switches? I would like to use this video as a reference of my report.
Aaron - this was almost a decade ago - and the configs were loaded by the vendors (HP and Cisco) - so can't really help you with config detail (and I imagine it would be dated)
Thanks for the video
Since their is only one link back to the WAN/Cisco side that dual HP Cores are useless... If the primary drops you loose more then 50% of your network...
Timothy Eckert - Actually, since there are two WAN links - one to the Cisco core and one to the HP core - and since the Cisco and HP cores are connected (not explained too well other than the diagram at the beginning) losing one would not lose 50% of the network BUT it would mean the core pair (Cisco or HP) that lost the WAN link would no longer have direct WAN access - traffic would be routed through the core with the remaining WAN link. Same goes if the core router (or port or card) with the WAN link connected to it fails
DUDE ! AWESOME :)
tHANK YOU
Gold
cable management is terrible
InteropNET is a temporary network - racks built up in a warehouse, shipped to an event hall, and assembled in a couple days. Runs for the duration of the show then is torn down. Cable management is not always a priority!