Maekhel's Posts
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Khaynet:that's not uniqueness, it will only lead to ridiculous long homepage which will chase most readers away. |
coolsix:that won't be a problem as long as you are ready to pay the price. |
first tin observed: always show post excerpts on ur homepage then a read more link to full articles. currently on mobile, will add more (if any) wen on my lappy |
Doubleoo:I use WhoGoHost too, follow these steps: 1. login to ur cpanel: www.yoursite.com/cpanel 2. locate and click on FTP manager, a popup will appear asking to choose directory, just click OK 3. Now u are in d FTP manager, u shld be in d public_html directory. u will see different files listed (cgi_bin, index.html) 4. Delete the index.html. file. and thats all. Note: if u visit ur site nw, it will show a list of files in the public_html directory eg cgi_bin, because there is no index file. Now u can upload ur actual site content. |
if u cn do all dis on a local server den doin it on a live server shouldn't be a problem. All u jst av to do is create a database on ur live server read http://tutorialslodge.com/creating-mysql-database-and-user/ to learn hw to do it. Then substitute ur local database details wit d one u jst created on ur live server. am open to questions both on my blog(link above) nd here |
A Cisco switch will do one of the three things with an incoming frame; • Forward it • Flood it • Filter it To make this decision, the switch consults its MAC Address table to check if there’s an entry for the destination MAC address – but first, the switch will actually check to see if there’s an entry for the source MAC address of the frame, because it’s that source MAC that the switch will use to actually build the table in the first place. To illustrate the concept, look at this illustration; continue reading: http://tutorialslodge.com/building-mac-table/ |
A hub is the same thing as a repeater, the hub is going to have more ports and that’s the major difference. A hub is just a multiport repeater, some hubs have more capabilities than others but that’s just the basic difference. We don’t see too many hubs again for reasons I’ll be stating later. Now just as a reminder, neither hub nor repeater has any thing to do with MAC address or the datalink layer of the OSI model. They are strictly physical layer devices, layer 1 of the OSI model. They perform no switching, they don’t look at the MAC addresses. Lets look at a hub with four systems; continue reading: http://tutorialslodge.com/switching-hub/ |
necz:I got the same mail too |
Picomon:check out WPtouch |
chaloner:The title of this thread is glaring enough na...TECH BLOGS... though my blog www.tutorialslodge.com is nt listed. |
adegold1234:share here let everybody gain |
dis shld do it <!DOCTYPE html> |
darthv:be more explanatory |
Jregz:yes ooo...so we can pick point them... they are painting bad image of us |
Kachisbarbie:lol |
CreativeWeb:seconded |
CreativeWeb:u still avnt answered d question cbrass: |
some clients sef can be very funny, dre s dis guy dat want me to build an e-commerce site fr 8k. after explaining wat the site will entail to him, he den confess dat someone contacted him and he had already collected 15k fr d project, spent 5k out of it and d owner is on his neck. I just told him d fact: explain to d owner wit dat amt it can never be possible. |
Talius:http://tutorialslodge.com/animated-dice-project/ |
SIRKLEM:http://tutorialslodge.com/java-beginners/ |
nice one |
Now a Host’s ability to send data to all the required destinations requires a bit of information. The host needs to know the following at a minimum… • What’s my IP address? • What’s my network mask? • What are the IP addresses of the DNS servers? • What’s my default gateway? Well how do we get this information to the PC when it comes online? We’ve got two options: • Visit each workstation and configure the information manually • Enable each workstation for DHCP And sooner or later, some of that information is going to change and the hosts will need to know about these changes. If there is something I want to tell you about the future of your career maybe you are starting to get certiified or you just happened to find yourself in IT, change is constant. I’m not talking about protocol changing or more security. I mean just change on your network. You can never assume that your network will always remain the same. The day is going is going to come when you just change an IP address on the DNS Server and not many of us run a network that has 5 PC’s and if you are a network admin and you run a full time job then let me know if you are hiring. Lol because it doesn’t happen very often as you’ll have several dozens or several hundreds of PC’s. If you previously hardcoded the information on all of the hosts, you’ll now have to go out and visit every workstation again and change the information manually. You and I have better things to do with our time believe me. If you use DHCP to begin with, you now just have to change the information on the DHCP server. DHCP is starting to sound pretty good! When the choice is visiting hundred’s or thousands of host on a typical netork manually or using DHCP to dynamically handle IP address assignment information, there really is no choice. Maybe your IP addresses are static, but your DNS server is going to change someday and your gateway addresses is also going to change one day. There is nothing evil if your network uses hard coded addresses lol and I’m not insulting you in any way. I’m saying it is efficient in the long run. source: http://tutorialslodge.com/dynamic-host-configuration-protocol-dhcp/ |
As network admins, we spend a lot of time concerning ourselves with IP addresses – assigning them, filtering them, etc. we don’t think about MAC addresses that often, but data from Host A to Host B must have a destination IP address for Host B and a destination MAC address as well. Well, this can be learnt from a DNS server which interprets the names of computers on the network. The natural question is “ How does Host A know the IP address of the DNS Server in the first place?” That happens in one of two ways: The DNS server address is hard-coded on Host A The DNS server address was learned via DHCP We’re going to take a look at DHCP later in this section, but here’s the partial output of ipconfig /all on a windows PC using DHCP. The DNS server IP addresses are In bold. You’ll see the bold part I highlighted there. That is the DNS server locations. That’s how this PC knows where to send the DNS request in the first place. One thing we don’t see there is the ARP server. ARP is the Address Resolution Protocol and that’s the protocol that allows a device to get a layer 2 address ( MAC Address). There’s no such thing as the ARP server that’s why we don’t have one. But Host A need to have the MAC address to send data successfully to Host B. well since there’s no ARP server, the ARP process uses a series of broadcasts and replies. Host A is the host sending a MAC address of a remote device, so it’ll be Host A that sends out the initial ARP Request. This request is a Layer 2 broadcast, meaning….. The source MAC address will be that of Host A The destination MAC address will be ff-ff-ff-ff-ff-ff (layer 2 broadcast adress) The source IP address will be that of Host A The destination IP address will be that of Host B (learned via DNS) It is very important to remember that the ARP request is a broadcast and the ARP reply is a unicast. So now Host A has all the data it needs about Host B and it can successfully send data to host B. source: http://tutorialslodge.com/arp/ |
Sibrah:pure html/css |
Tolulope95:meziemichael@gmail.com |
Tolulope95:I can get it done for you, contact me on: 07032047179 meziemichael@gmail.com |
sodson11:u r a mech student right? d site will contain normal departmental stuff. |
adewasco2k:that's just it |
Aque:contact me: call/whatsapp: 07032047179 email: meziemichael@gmail.com |
jboy01:bros u shld av created ur own thread na |
With the increase in the use of mobile devices to surf the web, there is a need to optimize the web for these mobile devices. Today, I will be discussing on Responsive Web Design. continue reading: http://tutorialslodge.com/responsive-web-design/ |
With the increase in the use of mobile devices to surf the web, there is a need to optimize the web for these mobile devices. Today, I will be discussing on Responsive Web Design. continue reading: http://tutorialslodge.com/responsive-web-design/ |
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