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Paperback TCP/IP First-Step Book

ISBN: 1587201089

ISBN13: 9781587201080

TCP/IP First-Step

Your first step into the world of TCP/IP No TCP/IP experience required Includes clear and easily understood explanations Makes learning easy Your first step to understanding TCP/IP begins here Learn... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Customer Reviews

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Good First-Step & Possibly 1.5th Step

TCP/IP First-Step (Your first step into the world of TCP/IP) Reviewer Name: Steve Owen Scheiderer, Network Administrator Reviewer Certification: MCSE NT 4.0, CCNA ISBN: 1-58720-108-9 Mark A. Sportack has done a pretty good job presenting the world of TCP/IP to the beginner. Although the first part of Chapter 2 seems to rehash too much of Chapter 1, after that, the flow of most of the book more than makes up for it. He lays a good foundation from the perspective of whether timely or reliable communications is needed and what aspects of TCP/IP may be applied to the same. Good historical and practical insights are found throughout the text. Unfortunately some of the figures in the book do not do the discussion justice. For example, Figure 3-6 and 3-8. The reader may have to slow down the pace to understand the point that is being made. His "Making Sense of the Chaos" (p. 57) discussion was well taken, but it took too long to get to the point. Figure 4-1 would have made more sense if it had been paralleled with the OSI model. While Figure 7.1 was supposed to have the network address portion of each IP address underlined, it did not. Figure 7-3 would have made more sense if each interface on the Internet Router had an IP address assigned. Figures 8-2 and 8-3 are confusing because the numbers 916 and 619 look like one might be a typo when discussing sequence of numbers. Some of the discussion may be a bit advanced for the beginner but may be a bonus review for the intermediate. Sportack's Chapter 5 discussion and "This isn't stuff you'll need every day," may tip off the reader to the more advanced topics that may be helpful but not readily absorbed by the beginner. While his treatment of binary numbers, IP addressing and related topics is well done, again, at times it seems some of the subnetting discussion is too advanced. Chapter 9 seems to be redundant. Chapter 12's discussion of coaxial cable failed to point out that cable TV and network coaxial are not interchangeable (different ohm ratings). The closing chapters would probably be the most helpful to the beginner and perhaps should have been placed at the beginning of the book. But sometimes the best is saved for last. Despite some of the challenges sited above, I'd recommend this book to the beginning TCP/IP student.

Excellent book for beginners

ENGLISH: This is my first experience with one of the books of the "First-Step" series and resulted in something that I will recommend to my students and to anybody who would like to begin to study networking technology. The style of the book is almost narrative, therefore the complicated concepts about TCP/IP are explained in an easy way and using analogies whenever is possible. The main objective of the book is to present the TCP/IP protocol stack, the layers that form it, to describe the functions that are carried out by each layer, and to explain why they are necessary for the communication process, but the author doesn't stop there, and the book also includes something about the origin and history of TCP/IP, the organizations that regulate and administer the development of networking technologies, routing and routing protocols, Ethernet and the Physical Layer; and tools for network troubleshooting. Obviously the most extensive treatment is given to the most important protocols: TCP (Transport Control Protocol), UDP (User Datagram Protocol) and IP (Internet Protocol) and I consider this the most valuable section of the book, because the function of each protocol, the way it does that function and the description of the information contain by the headers added to the messages, all are explained using a language that facilitates understanding; and while talking about how the TCP/IP protocol stack works, at the same time the author is talking about how the whole network communication is achieved, therefore, by reading the book, the reader is simultaneously learning about TCP/IP and also about how computer networks work and the physical devices that conform them. There are 2 chapters dedicated to the Windows XP configuration to connect a computer to a wired network, a wireless network, and through a modem using a dial-up connection. I consider these chapters out of place in this book, because if someone wants to know about this subject, I think she or he will go first to a book with the words "Windows XP" in its title, than to a book with the words "TCP/IP"; I think books on Windows XP do a good job regarding this subject, and for me it should have been enough to have said that it is necessary to configure the TCP/IP protocol on the operating system, but not to dedicate 2 chapters to show how to do it. Instead I would have preferred some mentioning about IPv6 (the new version of the IP protocol) or at least some warning about the future of IP and the implications of moving to the new version. Anyway and without any doubt, this is a great book that fulfills its goal. Based on my experience as a Cisco Netacad Instructor, this is a book that I recommend very much to anybody that has just started to study about networking technology or those who are studying for the CCNA certification. I enjoyed the reading and only took me about 8 hours to read the entire book. I think that you will also enjoy it. SPANISH: Esta es mi primera experiencia con
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