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Welcome to HyperLearning!

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e. Joshua.Newell_at_gmail.com. c. 757-675-8467. Certifications ... Please sign in on the roster when you arrive ... If you're in this class, it means you ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Welcome to HyperLearning!


1
Welcome to HyperLearning!
2
Network10/22/2007
  • Instructor Info
  • Joshua Newell
  • e. Joshua.Newell_at_gmail.com
  • c. 757-675-8467
  • Certifications
  • B.S.C.S College of William and Mary, 2004
  • Comptia A, 2000
  • Comptia Network, 2007
  • 1/2 CTT, 2007
  • Work Experience
  • Taught A, Network, MS Office, Programming
    Logic,  Command Line for two years at a
    competitor
  • Worked for two years doing software
    implementation and consulting for a government
    contractor in DC
  • Have been teaching for HLT since May
  • On-call tech and IT consultant for the last 8
    years

3
Class Schedule
  • Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays 530-10pm
  • 10/22 11/11
  • Oct 22, 24, 26, 29 Nov 2, 5, 7, 9, 11(830am-1)
  • Unless I state otherwise, every class will go
    until
  • at least 10pm.
  • Please do not start packing up until I dismiss
    class.
  • There is a 2 week gap between the Network and
    the MCDST start in order for you to prepare for
    and take your Network cert

4
Student Introductions
  • Tell me about yourself
  • Work experience
  • Current employment
  • IT Background
  • What kind of computing resources do you have
    access to?
  • Rate yourself on a scale of 1-10 on your Network
    type skills

5
-Classroom/Building orientation
  • Bathrooms
  • Cafeteria and Smoking Area
  • Snacks - Anything in a package (soda, crackers,
    granola bars, etc) is 50 cents
  • Anything not in a package (fruit, pastries,
    coffee, etc) is FREE
  • Coffee Poll
  • Breaks - Ask for one if you need it, or I'll call
    one when I do.  Try to keep it under 10 minutes

6
Cell Phone Policy
  • Please set your phones to vibrate or mute
  • I dont mind if you answer your phone, but please
    take it into the hallway
  • The first persons phone that rings is a warning
    to everyone else- Mute your phone!
  • The second persons phone that rings buys pizza
    for the class Papa Johns

7
Disk Drives
  • NOT HOT SWAPPABLE
  • FRAGILE / HANDLE WITH CARE
  • Get key from front at beginning of class. Make
    sure the computer is OFF. Insert the A"
    (red) disk
  • At end of class, shutdown your machine. Make sure
    it is OFF. The n, turn the key and remove the
    disk.

8
Expectations
  • Homework
  • There is homework.  Consider this class "computer
    college"
  • If you don't do the homework, you will not pass
    your certs. 
  •  Home Classroom
  • You need two computers with NICs and a
    switch/hub/router to practice on. 
  • Needs to be breakable- Not the machine your
    taxes/homework/Great American Novel are on
  • You can get these for cheap to free
  • Attendance
  • Attendance is mandatory
  • Please sign in on the roster when you arrive
  • If you miss more than two classes you will not
    receive a certificate of completion
  • If you're going to be late, please call me and
    let me know what time you will make it so I can
    plan to start class accordingly
  • If you don't come to class, you will not pass
    your certs.
  • Tutoring
  • Please ask for one-on-one tutoring outside of
    class if you need help.
  • I want you to pass your cert.

9
Goals
  • What's your goal for this class? What are
    your goals for intermediate future?
  • Goals vs Dreams
  • My goal is to get you certified. 
  • Well give you the tools books, lectures,
    Transcenders, PDF tests, answers to questions via
    phone and email, and hands-on training through
    labs.
  • If youre in this class, it means you probably
    already have your A. If you have already passed
    one cert then you know what you need to do to
    succeed and you know that its possible.

10
Lab0 - Fix Computer Names and Join the Domain
  • Logon as Administrator - Password is
    !Pass1234
  • Restart the computer if it asks you to and log
    back in
  • Right click My Computer-gt
  • Properties-gt
  • Computer Name-gt
  • Change-gt 
  • enter "Computer"
  • where is the two-digit number assigned to
    your computer (i.e. Computer01, Computer02, etc.)
  • Click Member of -gt Domain
  • Enter Classnet and hit OK
  • Logon as User where is the two-digit number
    assigned to your computer (i.e. User01, User02,
    etc.) with password !Pass1234
  • OK.Welcome to the Classnet Domain - Restart

11
TCP/IPThe lingua franca of the Internet
12
A Very Brief History of TCP/IP and the Internet
  • Origins of TCP/IP start in the 1960s at MIT and
    with the creation of ARPANET
  • The original versions of TCP/IP as we know it
    today were created in the 1980s
  • In 1983, the DoD mandated that all of their
    computer systems would use the TCP/IP protocol
    suite for long-haul communications
  • ARPANET started with four nodes in 1969 and grew
    to just under 600 nodes before it was split in
    1983.
  • ARPANET grew smaller and smaller during the late
    1980s as sites and traffic moved to the Internet,
    and was decommissioned in July 1990.

13
History of TCP/IP and the Internet (continued)
  • In 1986, the National Science Foundation (NSF)
    built a backbone network dubbed the NSFNET to
    interconnect four NSF-funded supercomputer
    centers
  • Originally for non-commercial use, the NSFNET
    eventually became the backbone of the Internet

14
Dramatic Growth of the Internet
15
TCP/IP What is it?
  • Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol
  • A suite of communications protocols
  • TCP/IP uses several protocols, the two main ones
    being TCP and IP.
  • TCP/IP is built into the UNIX operating system
    and is used by the Internet, making it the de
    facto standard for transmitting data over
    networks.
  • Even network operating systems that have their
    own protocols, such as Netware, also support
    TCP/IP

16
TCP/IP What is it?
  • TCP/IP is roughly based on the OSI (Open Systems
    Interconnection) Model

17
Math Review
  • Decimal Base 10
  • 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9
  • Binary Base 2
  • 0,1

18
Decimal Math
  • 1
  • 10
  • 100
  • 1000

Ex.
1 X 5
10 X 9
100 X 2
1000 X 1
1000 200 90 5
1295
19
Binary Math
  • 1 1
  • 10 2
  • 100 4
  • 1000 8

Ex.
1 X 1
2 X 1
4 X 1
8 X 1
8 4 2 1
15
20
Binary to Decimal Example
  • 1 1
  • 10 2
  • 100 4
  • 1000 8

Ex.
1 X 0
2 X 1
4 X 0
8 X 1
8 0 2 0
10
21
Decimal to Binary
  • Example 121d to Binary
  • Write out the places up to the number you are
    converting

64
32
16
8
4
2
1
128
1
1
1
1
0
0
1
__ __ __ __ __ __ __
121-6457
57-3225
25-169
9-81
1-10
22
Practice
  • Convert Binary to Decimal
  • 1011
  • 10101
  • 11111
  • 10000

23
Practice
  • Convert Decimal to Binary
  • 7
  • 11
  • 23
  • 123

24
http//www.hyperlearn.com/documents/will_harpers_t
cp_ip_subnetting_cheat_sheet.htm
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