Answers: IP Addresses 2
Try a little subnetting math for a quick review, and add some IP address configuration – short, sweet, and just one more quick round of practice. Check out the initial requirements in this post, and come back here for the
Try a little subnetting math for a quick review, and add some IP address configuration – short, sweet, and just one more quick round of practice. Check out the initial requirements in this post, and come back here for the
More daily lab practice! This one combines a little bit of subnetting math with IP address configuration. If you know how to calculate the IP addresses in a subnet, and you know how to configure IP addresses, make this one
Today’s lab may be simple – but that is part of the point. All these short labs should be automatic by the time you finish your final CCENT and or CCNA exam prep. Check out the lab requirements here, write
Short and sweet – how do you create new VLANs and put a couple of ports in each? Today’s lab should be an easy and automatic process before you go take the ICND1, ICND2, or CCNA R&S exams, but getting
ROAS pulls many concepts together: IP addressing, VLANs, and VLAN trunking. Plus ROAS requires configuration on both a router and switch. This post lists the answers to the previous lab – check out the lab, and check here for the
#ROAS can be one of those topics that seemed to be clear when you read about it, but when you see a sample test question, you just sit there and scratch your head wondering exactly what to do. ROAS can
Want to know if you know IPv4 static routes well enough for the #CCNA exam? Practice til you know them so well that you can think the commands faster than you can type them. They’re a great learning tool for IPv4
The first time you learn about IP routing, some of the basic ideas just do not click until you think hard about the contents of the IP routing table. One of the best tools to make you think about those