I don't know how you do it Jeremy, your teaching is like a magic it enters the cerebellum directly, your pedagogy is more than perfect . You made CCNA becomes easy to learn as if it is just a simple arithmetic. Great work and thank you so much
I have watched IPv6 explained by many people before. This is the first time anyone has actually written out the entire number of addresses. Let alone said out loud the entire thing. I am impressed.
Jeremy, there are good teachers and there are great teachers. YOU are both because you have true passion. Much respect to you. I'm glad that I found your youtube lectures!
I had to pause to video to come here and say this: I`ve finally understood how to convert Hex to bin and vice versa in like 3 min...that`s something I`ve been strugling throughout the whole course and you made it happen easy like that. And I`ve been researching every now and then everywhere on the web, why didn`t anyone teach as simple as that before?!?!?! Shocked haha And YOU made it happen!!! Thanks again Jeremy, you have a gift my friend, you`re blessed! Everyday you make me like and enjoy networking more and more. Cheers!!!
Hi, Jeremy san. I am on still day 20 but I just wanted to say THANK YOU for your all videos in advance. I appreciate your super clear English. It's my very first comment on RUclips btw. とても分かりやすく説明して下さってありがとうございます。これからも楽しみにしています。 世界はコロナで大変なことになっていますので、どうぞジャラミーさんもご自愛下さい。
Awesome! Well done :) How was the exam? I took the old CCNP exams but haven't tried the new ones yet, I'll take ENCOR next year to renew my CCNP though.
@@JeremysITLab It was extremely difficult, mostly because the questions are so difficult to answer in the allotted time. There are many question with network diagrams and data that you must sort through to find the correct answer. With just a minute left, I simply clicked randomly on the last 10 questions. I didn't even answer the final 3. I was absolutely certain that I failed, then I fell out of my chair when it said I passed. The test didn't say my score, only that I passed. I used Boson materials for study. If I were to do it again, I would buy the official Cisco materials, though Cisco materials are very expensive. Then again, because the test costs at least $400, you might as well buy the Cisco materials with the goal of only paying $400 once. On the bright side, it seems that you can pass with a very low score. I'm embarrassed to admit my percentages correct. lol. I did get an 87% on network architecture technology. I guess that saved me.
@@maxwellchessdotcom6952 When Maxwell the horse takes timed tests, it makes him feel sad. Maxwell is scared a timed test could show up at any moment and pop scare him. In case a pop quiz shows up, Maxwell practices skipping through questions in Boson's exam simulator to reach the end before the time is up. One day, a $400 technical certification attacked Maxwell, but Maxwell knew just what to do! Maxwell skipped through the questions just as fast as he could. To his surprise, he passed with only a minute to spare! Look how happy he is. Hooray, Maxwell! Hooray!
@maxwellchessdotcom6952 Appreciate your funny comments on the videos. They help me, and I'm sure others too, loosen up a bit when our hero, Jeremy, gets too technical. :)
I'm taking a CCNA course at my community college using the Netacad shell. I'll read a chapter and be pretty confused by a concept sometimes then come and watch your video that covers the same material and oh man, you make info so much more digestible.
I'm taking the CCNA for my 2nd time in a couple days. IPV6 is definitely one of those things that I tend to learn and then put on the shelf and forget about it again for a while, so I'm back here for another refresher. These are some great videos with tons of information, full of 'Eureka!' moments for me every time I watch one.
THANK YOU JEREMY! After so long I can finally understand this IN DEPTH and be CONFIDENT. So many of my knowledge gaps have been filled in by your course. You are a community treasure! Thank you!!!
My wife is doing entry level IT job and we are studying together. I hated studying in College on my first year but Jeremy make it more simple to understand this complex shit.
Many of us share the same thought that we will not be able to understand networking anyway without this channel, Even the exotic like IPv6 is explained by your like a breeze. Thank you.
i'm an chinese pepole ,i spent money study ccna ,the course is from some training network class in china,But I can say responsibly that those courses that cost money are by no means clearer than yours. The conversion between binary, decimal, and hexadecimal, I watched your video, and I understood it all at once. But after watching their videos, I was still at a loss for several times, because they did not teach the audience for the audience to understand, but felt that the audience could understand it. I even mainly look at your courses instead of the courses offered by Chinese training institutions that I paid for. Thank you! You are a very expressive and patient person
Your course is really good and thoroughly explained, you don't just teach us how to solve the problem, but the logic behind it. When I came to the part where we should define the network and host portions of a /93 prefix IPv6, I could easily figure out how to solve this just with the logic you've already taught us previously in the course. Thank you so much for this course. IMO Cisco should be headhunting you.
Hexadecimal to Binary and vice-versa have never been so simplified and well taught like this. Thanks Jeremy, your teaching method is quite unique and very easy to understand.
Someone has disliked this Video and by the time I am watching it I was asking myself why would someone do that!!! It can never be explained in a way better than this!! Thank you Jeremy.
Here's 0x1300 in binary (the line | is between the network portion and host portion of the address): 0001 001|1 0000 0000 To find the prefix, change the host portion to all 0s: 0001 001|0 0000 0000 Then convert back to hex: 0x1200 So 2001:DB8:BAD:CAFE:1200 is correct!
Thanks Jeremy for your great video and your time.. I like the way you take " block of information" and brake it down in a methodical way so I am able to understand the process and apply it. I also like that you choose to not fill your lessons with " padding bits " like so many instructors do. Quantity matters but on this channel I do appreciate the quality of the content.
I had been really struggling with decimal to hexidecimal conversion up until this video. I had looked up tons of guides and none really helped me understand. Your method is absolutely fantastic and I was able to understand after only one practice problem. Huge thank you.
Others have said it, but it really is incredible how I can come into this 30 min video knowing that IPv6 is hexadecimal and nothing else, and leave it knowing how to convert hexadecimal into binary and decimal, and thinking the quiz questions are obvious and simple. Glad you found what you were made to do, because you clearly were!
Jeremy is the goat, I am currently studying in order to take my CCNA this upcoming December and this guy makes learning so simple. When he first brought up the conversion of decimals/hexadecimal and binary I was thinking this was about to be complicated but it was so simple to understand.
Great video! I always find IPv6 to be a difficult topic simply because it's not something you use every day. This video did a great job going over some key components. Thank you!
IPv6 was a massive part of the CCNA the first time I took it. And they did NOT use nice numbers like "2001::4ab1" or nice subnet masks like /64. Given how limited your time is for the test, it was super frustrating having to convert between hex and decimal to find where a subnet ended and where it began, for example. It's not that I can't do it, it's that it takes very valuable and precious time that you simply do not have on the test. Now I see this video and kick myself for not knowing the shortcuts.
Jeremy, first of all I am honored to be your 400th comment on this video. Secondly, I appreciate your decision to pronounce out loud the quantity of IPv6 addresses available.
seven months after having taken the CCNA and I still can get all the questions correct and at the same time enjoy reviewing the contents. that's the power of jeremy's IT lab. Jeremy, as a suggestion, can you put out more content about docker containers? I mean, in addition to what is required for the CCNA. even starting a new series about docker, that would be awesome
This video was so helpful. You had it broken down in such a way that made it much easier to understand hexadecimal and IPv6. Thank you so much for these videos.
You are the best trainer. You have extra skill to give clear concept about topic and the practical. People from all over the world taking benefit of your skill and hard work I salute you.
15:51 you actually did it! I was wondering how you'd teach this to us and I was happy & amused to see you pronouncing the entire number! 😄 Thank you very much for your course 🙏
I've been learning for CCNA for some time and from different sources, but this is the first course that explains marking of decimal, binary and hex numbers in plain and simple manner. Great thing, thank you Jeremy!
this video is, by far, the best introductory explanation to IPv6 (so far...)... i hope the next 2 videos can show the same detailed type of explanation. Thanks Jeremy, I really appreciate it :)
Hey Jeremy, Thanks for this video...I was looking forward to watching ipv6. This is a very curious part of the video series. First I reviewed number systems. Then watched this again and all started to make sense. I had some trouble with finding the network portion of the address. But that's solved now thanks very much man. 😀
My man I seriously thought you just read the IPv6 address possibilities from off the top. Super surprised when you actually started to read off the number and then continue through its entirety.
Deff loved this!! Thank you so much for making everything so easy to understand, Jeremy! Had a couple of minutes laughing on the Google big number search.
Very, very good video series indeed! I dare to say even better than the Boson Video Training with Antony Sequeira... Thank you for that and best regards!
23:33 "You'll never need that many hosts." Future humans (Or other ;) ), remember this statement. Please reply to my comment on the date and time that Jeremy is proven wrong. I may be dead at the time, but I would appreciate that you assisted me with calling him out, albeit separated by a large block of time. :)
Why do we have to go all the way down converting hexa into decimal when after the very first column we have the answer if we just split the hexa number in half and convert it straight into binary (my guess is a further explanation to make it easier for all of us)... just two examples for someone who is still struggling, 0x2B = ob 00I0 and ob I0II = ob 00I0 I0II and 0xD7 = ob II0I 0III... Thank you very much Jeremy, you're truly one of a kind explaining networking and probably the best one out there...
always tnx for the video course jeremy. im sill on day 20 but i need to learn these before going to my class otherwise i will get kicked out today ahhahaha tnx a loot for all your work man
Very good explanation, waiting for round 2. Thank you very much! BTW: I know now why you just make advertise for boson's exim and lab, and not videos .... sorry for this teacher, but your free videos are way better than these from boson ....
Are you talking about the videos Anthony Sequeira made for Boson? I haven't seen them, so I'm not sure if they're good or not! But I'm glad you like mine :)
Absolutely Amazing! Planning my exam in Mid December. I know the course will not be completed by December but I'll try my best to utilise your videos! It will be helpful if the new technologies such as network automation and wireless will be added in future videos. #jforjeremy
"Hey baby, let's go to my house and watch some Jeremy's IT lab."
You make it a joke, it's actually happening lol
You trying to CCNA and chill?
Lol to funny
My wife loves the FD80 and FF02 especially when the kids are asleep.
Let's put Jeremy on MAX volume and....... 😉
I don't know how you do it Jeremy, your teaching is like a magic it enters the cerebellum directly, your pedagogy is more than perfect . You made CCNA becomes easy to learn as if it is just a simple arithmetic. Great work and thank you so much
Thank you, I'm really glad to hear that! :)
Haha magic is the only explanation...
@@JeremysITLab You are amazing :)
Agreed
Indeed kkkkkkkkkkkkkkk
I have watched IPv6 explained by many people before. This is the first time anyone has actually written out the entire number of addresses. Let alone said out loud the entire thing. I am impressed.
That was a flex when you listed out the amount of IPv6 addresses available 😁
Jeremy, there are good teachers and there are great teachers. YOU are both because you have true passion. Much respect to you. I'm glad that I found your youtube lectures!
Thank you David! I'm really happy you think so :)
@@JeremysITLab One of the best. Gift
I had to pause to video to come here and say this: I`ve finally understood how to convert Hex to bin and vice versa in like 3 min...that`s something I`ve been strugling throughout the whole course and you made it happen easy like that.
And I`ve been researching every now and then everywhere on the web, why didn`t anyone teach as simple as that before?!?!?! Shocked haha
And YOU made it happen!!!
Thanks again Jeremy, you have a gift my friend, you`re blessed!
Everyday you make me like and enjoy networking more and more.
Cheers!!!
Hi, Jeremy san. I am on still day 20 but I just wanted to say THANK YOU for your all videos in advance. I appreciate your super clear English.
It's my very first comment on RUclips btw.
とても分かりやすく説明して下さってありがとうございます。これからも楽しみにしています。
世界はコロナで大変なことになっていますので、どうぞジャラミーさんもご自愛下さい。
Thank you Kose! It's an honor to get your first comment on RUclips ;)
僕の動画がお役に立ててとてもうれしいです!
Jeremy, I just passed my ENCOR 350-401 exam! Thank you for setting me on this path!
Awesome! Well done :) How was the exam? I took the old CCNP exams but haven't tried the new ones yet, I'll take ENCOR next year to renew my CCNP though.
@@JeremysITLab It was extremely difficult, mostly because the questions are so difficult to answer in the allotted time. There are many question with network diagrams and data that you must sort through to find the correct answer. With just a minute left, I simply clicked randomly on the last 10 questions. I didn't even answer the final 3. I was absolutely certain that I failed, then I fell out of my chair when it said I passed. The test didn't say my score, only that I passed.
I used Boson materials for study. If I were to do it again, I would buy the official Cisco materials, though Cisco materials are very expensive. Then again, because the test costs at least $400, you might as well buy the Cisco materials with the goal of only paying $400 once.
On the bright side, it seems that you can pass with a very low score. I'm embarrassed to admit my percentages correct. lol. I did get an 87% on network architecture technology. I guess that saved me.
@@maxwellchessdotcom6952 When Maxwell the horse takes timed tests, it makes him feel sad. Maxwell is scared a timed test could show up at any moment and pop scare him. In case a pop quiz shows up, Maxwell practices skipping through questions in Boson's exam simulator to reach the end before the time is up. One day, a $400 technical certification attacked Maxwell, but Maxwell knew just what to do! Maxwell skipped through the questions just as fast as he could. To his surprise, he passed with only a minute to spare! Look how happy he is. Hooray, Maxwell! Hooray!
@@pattyspanker8955 That's pretty much how it happened. :)
@maxwellchessdotcom6952 Appreciate your funny comments on the videos. They help me, and I'm sure others too, loosen up a bit when our hero, Jeremy, gets too technical. :)
I'm taking a CCNA course at my community college using the Netacad shell. I'll read a chapter and be pretty confused by a concept sometimes then come and watch your video that covers the same material and oh man, you make info so much more digestible.
I'm taking the CCNA for my 2nd time in a couple days. IPV6 is definitely one of those things that I tend to learn and then put on the shelf and forget about it again for a while, so I'm back here for another refresher. These are some great videos with tons of information, full of 'Eureka!' moments for me every time I watch one.
THANK YOU JEREMY! After so long I can finally understand this IN DEPTH and be CONFIDENT. So many of my knowledge gaps have been filled in by your course. You are a community treasure! Thank you!!!
My wife is doing entry level IT job and we are studying together. I hated studying in College on my first year but Jeremy make it more simple to understand this complex shit.
Many of us share the same thought that we will not be able to understand networking anyway without this channel,
Even the exotic like IPv6 is explained by your like a breeze. Thank you.
i'm an chinese pepole ,i spent money study ccna ,the course is from some training network class in china,But I can say responsibly that those courses that cost money are by no means clearer than yours. The conversion between binary, decimal, and hexadecimal, I watched your video, and I understood it all at once. But after watching their videos, I was still at a loss for several times, because they did not teach the audience for the audience to understand, but felt that the audience could understand it. I even mainly look at your courses instead of the courses offered by Chinese training institutions that I paid for. Thank you! You are a very expressive and patient person
Thank you for your kind words!
i love it how you pronounced the exact numbers of available ipv6 addresses
Dude, you should realize that your explanation is insane .This course is a masterpiece 🤩
Your course is really good and thoroughly explained, you don't just teach us how to solve the problem, but the logic behind it.
When I came to the part where we should define the network and host portions of a /93 prefix IPv6, I could easily figure out how to solve this just with the logic you've already taught us previously in the course. Thank you so much for this course. IMO Cisco should be headhunting you.
wild he actually said the full 340,282,366,920,938,463,463,374,607,431,768,211,456. My hat is off to you good sir.
Hexadecimal to Binary and vice-versa have never been so simplified and well taught like this. Thanks Jeremy, your teaching method is quite unique and very easy to understand.
Thank you Jeremy, I was nervous about IPv6 but your teachings made it clear and kind of fun. your doing amazing things and we appreciate it.
Thanks, glad to hear that! :)
Love it, can' t wait for the next one! I am sure that you will make networkers like IPv6!
I hope so ;)
Take a minute to praise this man's presentation skills.
Thank you ;)
I'm looking forward to the CCNP video's😉
CCNP videos will come next year ;)
@@JeremysITLab Nooooooooooooo its so looooooooooooooong
Take a bow Jeremy to say that whole number for available IPV6 addresses! That was unexpected, WOW !! I just had to pause the video to comment here 🙂
After a Long Journey with IPv4 Addressing 🛵🛵 Now I Landed on a completely New Era of Technology🥳🥳 Thank you Jeremy Sir 🙏 Great Salute 🙏🙏
Thanks, I hope you like it ;)
Someone has disliked this Video and by the time I am watching it I was asking myself why would someone do that!!! It can never be explained in a way better than this!! Thank you Jeremy.
Thank you ;)
well said Kone fine, I agree with you. All what he teaches just simply enters the cerebellum without any if and buts.
Thank you :)
Im finding the IPV6 Prefix I think the third one down answer should be 2001:DB8:BAD:CAFE:1E:: /71 @27:40 minutes
Here's 0x1300 in binary (the line | is between the network portion and host portion of the address):
0001 001|1 0000 0000
To find the prefix, change the host portion to all 0s:
0001 001|0 0000 0000
Then convert back to hex: 0x1200
So 2001:DB8:BAD:CAFE:1200 is correct!
Thanks Jeremy for your great video and your time..
I like the way you take " block of information" and brake it down in a methodical way so I am able to understand the process and apply it. I also like that you choose to not fill your lessons with " padding bits " like so many instructors do. Quantity matters but on this channel I do appreciate the quality of the content.
Thanks Email, I'm glad my teaching method works for you!
I had been really struggling with decimal to hexidecimal conversion up until this video. I had looked up tons of guides and none really helped me understand. Your method is absolutely fantastic and I was able to understand after only one practice problem. Huge thank you.
Others have said it, but it really is incredible how I can come into this 30 min video knowing that IPv6 is hexadecimal and nothing else, and leave it knowing how to convert hexadecimal into binary and decimal, and thinking the quiz questions are obvious and simple.
Glad you found what you were made to do, because you clearly were!
Jeremy is the goat, I am currently studying in order to take my CCNA this upcoming December and this guy makes learning so simple. When he first brought up the conversion of decimals/hexadecimal and binary I was thinking this was about to be complicated but it was so simple to understand.
Great video! I always find IPv6 to be a difficult topic simply because it's not something you use every day. This video did a great job going over some key components. Thank you!
Thanks John! More videos on IPv6 to come :)
IPv6 was a massive part of the CCNA the first time I took it. And they did NOT use nice numbers like "2001::4ab1" or nice subnet masks like /64. Given how limited your time is for the test, it was super frustrating having to convert between hex and decimal to find where a subnet ended and where it began, for example. It's not that I can't do it, it's that it takes very valuable and precious time that you simply do not have on the test. Now I see this video and kick myself for not knowing the shortcuts.
I have passed CCNA on 31st Oct,all credit goes to you ,thanks very much for all your effort👍👍
Awesome! But the credit is all your's, you're the one who put in the time to study ;)
Thanks again Jeremy.Weldone👍
@@JeremysITLab Dank!
Jeremy, first of all I am honored to be your 400th comment on this video. Secondly, I appreciate your decision to pronounce out loud the quantity of IPv6 addresses available.
IPv6
Maybe after Jeremy lesson I’ll finally understand it!
In my years of experience I only seen one company use it and it was for testing.
The statistics show that IPv6 is really growing, but I haven't really used it in my work either (yet).
Legend comes back.
seven months after having taken the CCNA and I still can get all the questions correct and at the same time enjoy reviewing the contents. that's the power of jeremy's IT lab.
Jeremy, as a suggestion, can you put out more content about docker containers? I mean, in addition to what is required for the CCNA. even starting a new series about docker, that would be awesome
I thought i knew how ipv6 and its prefix works, but you just made me understand it perfect. Your teaching is the best!
Thank you :)
This video was so helpful. You had it broken down in such a way that made it much easier to understand hexadecimal and IPv6. Thank you so much for these videos.
Thanks, glad to hear it :)
Your explanations are flawless
Thanks Andy :)
I have never in my life heard anyone say such a large number never mind do their do diligence to find out how to say it.
Many props to you.
You are the best trainer. You have extra skill to give clear concept about topic and the practical. People from all over the world taking benefit of your skill and hard work I salute you.
Hey !!Greetings from tunisia !!! I was happy to answer correctly the last quiz. u made more confident about the ipv6 topic.thx
Greetings! Thanks for your comment :)
15:51 you actually did it! I was wondering how you'd teach this to us and I was happy & amused to see you pronouncing the entire number! 😄 Thank you very much for your course 🙏
CAFE FEED BABE @27:23, I see what you did there:)
Great course, thanks for all your hard work!
Surprisingly, I think this is the first comment about those :D
I was about to say the same lol
@@JeremysITLab I don't understand why the bad babe wasn't changed since its a /63. Wouldn't it fall into the E bit?
Best CCNA on RUclips ! Thank you 🙏
I've been learning for CCNA for some time and from different sources, but this is the first course that explains marking of decimal, binary and hex numbers in plain and simple manner. Great thing, thank you Jeremy!
this video is, by far, the best introductory explanation to IPv6 (so far...)... i hope the next 2 videos can show the same detailed type of explanation. Thanks Jeremy, I really appreciate it :)
Jeremy your course is phenomenal, please consider creating a CCNP course in the future when you have the time, thank you very much
Thank you! Perhaps after I finish the CCNA course
Thank you for this explanation
Another Great video! Thanks Jeremy. I will be following you to the end of the course.
Thank you, I'm glad to have you follow my course :)
explained ipv6 10x better than my school teacher thanks Jeremy
15:24 I think that should be enough for a while
Yeah, enough IP addresses for the whole universe.
@@JeremysITLab I can't even pronounce correctly that number on my mother language (Macedonian language)
You are a god among men with your teaching style.
Thank you, glad you like it ;0
Thank you for making and publishing this video. It was very helpful and made IPv6 clearer. Thank you again and keep up the good work! God bless you!
Thank you, I'm glad to hear that :)
Hey Jeremy,
Thanks for this video...I was looking forward to watching ipv6. This is a very curious part of the video series. First I reviewed number systems. Then watched this again and all started to make sense. I had some trouble with finding the network portion of the address. But that's solved now thanks very much man.
😀
Loved that you really red the ipv6 address pool :))
Had to breath a few times to say all of it, but I did it! ;)
My man I seriously thought you just read the IPv6 address possibilities from off the top. Super surprised when you actually started to read off the number and then continue through its entirety.
Thank you for your dedication, without your lecture video we will be lost.
thank Jeremy very much for the excellent explanation, it does help me to understand IPv6 much better.
I am 10 min in the video and I just have to like and comment, the way you explain is genius
Very clearly explained! Excellent content!
Thank you :)
これはipv6に関する最高のチュートリアルです。 ありがとうございました , ジェレミーさん!
Hi, thank you very much the way you explained the ipv6 conversion and subnetting is very easy to understand. Kudos to you.
Thanks Ben, glad to hear that :)
I immediately had a smile when you read that all 128 bit IPv6 address 😄
BAD CAFE - FEED DAD - BAD BABE..I see what you did there :D. Huge thanks to you Jeremy!
very clean way to teach people thank you Jeremy !
Thanks :)
Thank you!! You and Networkchuck are AWEOME!!
Thank you! NetworkChuck is great!
You explaind very understandably. Hats off to you Jeremy.
Excelent subject and very well explained. Thanks again Bro !
Thank you, Cesar :)
Deff loved this!! Thank you so much for making everything so easy to understand, Jeremy! Had a couple of minutes laughing on the Google big number search.
Haha, glad you enjoyed it ;)
The way you read the numbers, awsome
CAFE FEED BABE, that's sus. for sure, sir, one of the most amazing course on the internet
15:50 I always wondered what terms you would need to use to count this high and you answered my question. lol That's a HUGE number.
Very, very good video series indeed! I dare to say even better than the Boson Video Training with Antony Sequeira...
Thank you for that and best regards!
Thanks, glad you like it 👍
23:33 "You'll never need that many hosts." Future humans (Or other ;) ), remember this statement. Please reply to my comment on the date and time that Jeremy is proven wrong. I may be dead at the time, but I would appreciate that you assisted me with calling him out, albeit separated by a large block of time. :)
You're Doing a Great Job.....👍
Thank you!
damnnnnn man what a lecture i loved they way you teach. i salute your hard work on vedios. the besssttt ever lecture to learn about IPv6
Thanks Junaid :)
Jeremy reading out the entire number at 15:25 had no business being as funny as it was
Best teacher ever👍👍
Thanks Abe :)
@15:25 I thought it was there for decoration but wow.. Jermey did really read that!! 😲 ❤ didn't see that one coming tbh.. 😂
The great Jeremy... You're generous man
Thank you ;)
Hey Jeremy havent watched this one yet, thanks in advance
I hope you like it :)
@@JeremysITLab thank you
great IPv6 introduction. thanks, Jeremy.
You are bad to the bone!! Good job on naming the amount of addresses!
"You will never need that many"... said Vint Cerf... 🤣🤣🤣
Thank you for information. I was able to easily understand ipv6, thanks for your videos.
Thank you :)
Thanks, Jeremy! Great lesson!
Thanks Emil :)
Thank you, Jeremy! I failed on the 28th! But I am not giving up 😊; I'm retaking in a few weeks.
Ouch! But I'm glad to see your positive attitude :)
What other resources are you using?
@@JeremysITLab I'm using Boson's labs and testing software, and I just received the OCG yesterday.
Why do we have to go all the way down converting hexa into decimal when after the very first column we have the answer if we just split the hexa number in half and convert it straight into binary (my guess is a further explanation to make it easier for all of us)... just two examples for someone who is still struggling, 0x2B = ob 00I0 and ob I0II = ob 00I0 I0II and 0xD7 = ob II0I 0III... Thank you very much Jeremy, you're truly one of a kind explaining networking and probably the best one out there...
Pay close attention to 24:58 it is super important i had that mistake, thank's for notice it and advice us.
As always Jeremy WELL DONE!!!!!!
Thank you!
(might you be THAT Palmer? :))
always tnx for the video course jeremy.
im sill on day 20 but i need to learn these before going to my class otherwise i will get kicked out today ahhahaha tnx a loot for all your work man
Good luck!
Very good explanation, waiting for round 2.
Thank you very much!
BTW: I know now why you just make advertise for boson's exim and lab, and not videos .... sorry for this teacher, but your free videos are way better than these from boson ....
Are you talking about the videos Anthony Sequeira made for Boson? I haven't seen them, so I'm not sure if they're good or not! But I'm glad you like mine :)
Nice introduction about IPv6. All clear! 🐴
My teacher became stupid after having seen this masterclass! Thanks
Absolutely Amazing! Planning my exam in Mid December. I know the course will not be completed by December but I'll try my best to utilise your videos! It will be helpful if the new technologies such as network automation and wireless will be added in future videos. #jforjeremy
Yep, I'll cover all CCNA exam topics 👍 love the hashtag ;)
Thank you Jermey for another great lesson !