NEW CCNA 200-301 PART 3/6 - Routing-IPv4/IPv6
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Genre: eLearning | Language: English + srt | Duration: 57 lectures (8h 39m) | Size: 3.95 GB
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Genre: eLearning | Language: English + srt | Duration: 57 lectures (8h 39m) | Size: 3.95 GB
Third Part of CCNA 200-301 Video Series by Triple CCIE Certified Trainer Sikandar Shaik (CCIEx3 - RS/SP/SEC)
What you'll learn:
WAN Connectivity
Static Routing
Default Routing
Routing Protocols OSPF
IPv6 addressing
IPv6 Routing
Requirements
Should have covered CCNA 200-301 Part 1
Basic Networking
Basic IP addressing and Subnetting
Basic Switching Concepts
Description
This course is the Third Part of CCNA 200-301 Video Series by Triple CCIE Certified Trainer Sikandar Shaik (CCIEx3 - RS/SP/SEC)
This course helps you prepare to take the 200-301 Cisco® Certified Network Associate (CCNA®) exam. By passing this one exam, you earn CCNA certification. The 200-301 CCNA exam goes live on February 24, 2020.
The new CCNA program to prepare you for today’s associate-level job roles in IT technologies. CCNA now includes security and automation and programmability. The program has one certification that covers a broad range of fundamentals for IT careers, with one exam and one training course to help you prepare.
Newly retooled for the latest technologies and job roles, the CCNA training course and exam give you the foundation you need to take your career in any direction. CCNA certification covers a breadth of topics, including:
Network fundamentals
Network access
IP connectivity
IP services
Security fundamentals
Automation and programmability
Who this course is for
Who wants to prepare for CCNA 200-301 Exam & get Certified
people who want to go into job roles such as network support engineer and network administrator.
if you want a career in networking, especially enterprise networking,
CCNA certified may be a good move for you because Cisco is still the dominant leader in that industry.
system administrators who are CCNA-certified because they wanted to understand more about the networks that their servers will be running on.