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Job Intervew Question...

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Originally posted by: Beattie
Originally posted by: CVSiN
uh no.. you dont know how to subnet?
please if I give you an Ip range you are gonan tell me 1 client when i give you an IP to subnet...
you just lost your job.


You said an IP. Not an IP and subnet. Nor for that matter did you say anything about NAT.

You are the one who is wrong.

um wtf does a NAT have to do with learning to subnet an IP address.. if i give you 1 IP address you should be able to tell me
1. how many possible clients belong in the class of the IP..
2. which subnet that IP should belong to
3. what class IP it is..

talk about ignorant..
go take a Cisco class or an MCSE class and then talk about TCP/IP
 
Originally posted by: Beattie
Originally posted by: CVSiN
uh no.. you dont know how to subnet?
please if I give you an Ip range you are gonan tell me 1 client when i give you an IP to subnet...
you just lost your job.


You said an IP. Not an IP and subnet. Nor for that matter did you say anything about NAT.

You are the one who is wrong.

I was thinking the same thing. IP range wasn't mentioned in the original question either.
 
Originally posted by: CVSiN
Originally posted by: Beattie
Originally posted by: CVSiN
uh no.. you dont know how to subnet?
please if I give you an Ip range you are gonan tell me 1 client when i give you an IP to subnet...
you just lost your job.


You said an IP. Not an IP and subnet. Nor for that matter did you say anything about NAT.

You are the one who is wrong.

um wtf does a NAT have to do with learning to subnet an IP address.. if i give you 1 IP address you should be able to tell me
1. how many possible clients belong in the class of the IP..
2. which subnet that IP should belong to
3. what class IP it is..

talk about ignorant..
go take a Cisco class or an MCSE class and then talk about TCP/IP
ummm, we gave up on classfull addressing somewhere around a decade ago. Class has no reference or meaning anymore except for multicast addresses. Or possibly ancient classfull routing protocols which nobody uses anymore.

One must also supply a mask or prefix length to answer your questions.

😉




 
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: CVSiN
Originally posted by: Beattie
Originally posted by: CVSiN
uh no.. you dont know how to subnet?
please if I give you an Ip range you are gonan tell me 1 client when i give you an IP to subnet...
you just lost your job.


You said an IP. Not an IP and subnet. Nor for that matter did you say anything about NAT.

You are the one who is wrong.

um wtf does a NAT have to do with learning to subnet an IP address.. if i give you 1 IP address you should be able to tell me
1. how many possible clients belong in the class of the IP..
2. which subnet that IP should belong to
3. what class IP it is..

talk about ignorant..
go take a Cisco class or an MCSE class and then talk about TCP/IP
ummm, we gave up on classfull addressing somewhere around a decade ago. Class has no reference or meaning anymore except for multicast addresses. Or possibly ancient classfull routing protocols which nobody uses anymore.

One must also supply a mask or prefix length to answer your questions.

😉
192.168.0.0/22
this is all i need to give to have them tell me that info...
using CIDR...


 
Originally posted by: nitsuj3580
Originally posted by: Beattie
Originally posted by: CVSiN
uh no.. you dont know how to subnet?
please if I give you an Ip range you are gonan tell me 1 client when i give you an IP to subnet...
you just lost your job.


You said an IP. Not an IP and subnet. Nor for that matter did you say anything about NAT.

You are the one who is wrong.

I was thinking the same thing. IP range wasn't mentioned in the original question either.

Uh...yep. You said IP, not range or even subnet. An IP address, which I think most people would assume is what you meant...can only support one client.
 
LOL spidey you like to subnet? i cant stand it .. was just pointing out that I have been asked it on job interveiws before when TCP/IP networking is involved.
 
Originally posted by: CVSiN
LOL spidey you like to subnet? i cant stand it .. was just pointing out that I have been asked it on job interveiws before when TCP/IP networking is involved.

I wouldn't say love to subnet. I've just been working with it for so long I dazzle people with the ability to do it in my head in mere seconds.

When interviewing somebody I'll give basic subnet and summarization questions. But more so they can show a basic knowledge of the subject.

You're right though, if somebody said "I know IP" and you provided a simple question like 192.168.0.0/22 and they couldn't answer or dodge it.

Well then they lied.

😉
 
Originally posted by: CVSiN
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: CVSiN
Originally posted by: Beattie
Originally posted by: CVSiN
uh no.. you dont know how to subnet?
please if I give you an Ip range you are gonan tell me 1 client when i give you an IP to subnet...
you just lost your job.


You said an IP. Not an IP and subnet. Nor for that matter did you say anything about NAT.

You are the one who is wrong.

um wtf does a NAT have to do with learning to subnet an IP address.. if i give you 1 IP address you should be able to tell me
1. how many possible clients belong in the class of the IP..
2. which subnet that IP should belong to
3. what class IP it is..

talk about ignorant..
go take a Cisco class or an MCSE class and then talk about TCP/IP
ummm, we gave up on classfull addressing somewhere around a decade ago. Class has no reference or meaning anymore except for multicast addresses. Or possibly ancient classfull routing protocols which nobody uses anymore.

One must also supply a mask or prefix length to answer your questions.

😉
192.168.0.0/22
this is all i need to give to have them tell me that info...
using CIDR...


I bet my wang is bigger than both of yours.
 
Originally posted by: nan0bug
Originally posted by: CVSiN
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: CVSiN
Originally posted by: Beattie
Originally posted by: CVSiN
uh no.. you dont know how to subnet?
please if I give you an Ip range you are gonan tell me 1 client when i give you an IP to subnet...
you just lost your job.


You said an IP. Not an IP and subnet. Nor for that matter did you say anything about NAT.

You are the one who is wrong.

um wtf does a NAT have to do with learning to subnet an IP address.. if i give you 1 IP address you should be able to tell me
1. how many possible clients belong in the class of the IP..
2. which subnet that IP should belong to
3. what class IP it is..

talk about ignorant..
go take a Cisco class or an MCSE class and then talk about TCP/IP
ummm, we gave up on classfull addressing somewhere around a decade ago. Class has no reference or meaning anymore except for multicast addresses. Or possibly ancient classfull routing protocols which nobody uses anymore.

One must also supply a mask or prefix length to answer your questions.

😉
192.168.0.0/22
this is all i need to give to have them tell me that info...
using CIDR...


I bet my wang is bigger than both of yours.


Dunno about bigger but i worked for Wang before 😉

 
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