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Ymets2k
05-20-2003, 01:12 PM
Hey i'm doing networking coarse and ran into a bump in the road and i aint the only person to have this problem. Its the math parts. Didnt know i would run into it , tcp/ip has enough math to make my brain go round and round.... Do you think since i have problems in that , that it will lead to bad results for the employer?

Mr N8
05-20-2003, 01:25 PM
No, I wouldn't worry about it. The parts you need to know, you will figure out. I don't use advanced math in networking. The stuff that you do use becomes second nature in a very short time.

Ymets2k
05-20-2003, 01:30 PM
Ok thanks because dont know what to expect and at the very beginning i wanted to fix computers and learn on that so i do have or will have A+
ceritifcation by august. Heard doesnt pay as much though so dont know which direction to go now

cameroth
05-21-2003, 07:20 AM
i'd say that the math that you really need to know for networking, you'll go over durring that course.

Ymets2k
05-21-2003, 11:56 AM
i'm drowning in it

ktkendall
05-21-2003, 02:20 PM
Originally posted by Ymets2k
Ok thanks because dont know what to expect and at the very beginning i wanted to fix computers and learn on that so i do have or will have A+
ceritifcation by august. Heard doesnt pay as much though so dont know which direction to go now

Right A+ alone will not get U high paying salary but it is a start and basically A+ is the palce to start on your Cert path. Sounds like you are studying for net+ too though. There isn't really that much about TCP/IP on A+, but the net+ cert is where U get a bit into the IP addressing scheme and the classes of IP addresses and default subnets. Even A+ alone will at least get U to the interview though over someone without it for an entry level position, and at this point U take what U can to get the experience for which there is no cert test or anything as valuable as realworld experience, and U have to start somewhere...

padawan
05-21-2003, 07:56 PM
I assume you are doing subnets? Or is it hex? Just remember, in the real world, you will use a subnet calculator on the job.

Ymets2k
05-22-2003, 04:15 PM
Subnets well just found out right now that what i need to do is subnetting ya i have the calculator all i need to do is now how many bits submask is and stuff like that and i dont know anything been getting help more then once and i'm blank as a book

ktkendall
05-22-2003, 07:06 PM
An IP address or a subnet mask are both 32 bits, and just FYI cause I do remember this from NET+ test.. Mac address is 48 bits...