you SUCK at password security so PLEASE get a password manager like Dashlane: ntck.co/dashlane50 🔥🔥Join the NetworkChuck Academy!: ntck.co/NCAcademy In this next episode of NetworkChuck’s you SUCK at Subnetting course, we dive a bit deeper into how RFC1918 and NAT saved the internet from crumbling due to IP address exhaustion. So don’t miss out as Chuck goes into detail about RFC1918, NAT, and you guessed it…. More Subnetting! Are you ready to get serious about your CCNA? --------------------------------------------------- ►CCNA Courseware: ntck.co/bscw (Boson) (Affiliate) ►CCNA Lab: ntck.co/bccna (Boson NetSim) (affiliate) ►CCNA Practice Exam: ntck.co/bnexccna (Boson ExSim) (affiliate) ►CCNP Lab: ntck.co/bsenns (Boson NetSim) (affiliate) ►CCNP Practice Exam: ntck.co/bsenex (Boson ExSim) (affiliate) 0:00 ⏩ Intro 0:35 ⏩ your passwords suck too 2:48 ⏩ The internet Band-Aid 6:02 ⏩ The even bigger solution, NAT 10:58 ⏩ IPv4 + 2 12:54 ⏩ Outro 14:01 ⏩ Are you working on your CCNA??
@Log4Jake2 жыл бұрын
I actually had my Google compromised one time but I have dashlane now.
@hn1f2 жыл бұрын
Jokes on you, ONLY selfhosted vaultwarden/bitwarden or offline keepassxc is the best, Just like selfhosting your files or storing them on a flash drive is better then storing them on someone's computer (cloud). Edit: added a bit more stuff
@sillybillycapybara2 жыл бұрын
Chuckk when are you finishing the free ccna coursee
@SeanPaulNotTheSinger2 жыл бұрын
Your Dashlane graphic at 0:57 actually says DAHSLANE... uh... oops
@veritasdesigns50672 жыл бұрын
The quality of your free certificates or minimum cost’s is great and all. A lot of what your talking about i got thru a local community college degree #CIT Want to really unlock your mind is understanding the other side. #ocwmit on KZbin. Labs are not free, the books are not free. But the actual classes are. You come full circle. Sponsored by #mit #Harvard
@amicloud_yt2 жыл бұрын
In case anyone is wondering why we skipped IPv5: Because, while it did have significant improvements over IPv4, it still used the 32 bit addresses (the 4 octets) that IPv4 used. It was a thing but never became a widely adopted standard. You can thank IPv5 for a few things, such as VoIP, though!
@tamishverma22612 жыл бұрын
thanks
@reni_christian8 ай бұрын
Wow. Really appreciate for sharing this. I get to know about something interesting. Thanks to your comments ✨♥️
@brixiex25802 жыл бұрын
Jumping into tech as 32 yr old single mom with a special needs child, who works full time, . I'm gearing up to get IT certs and this channel is coming in CLUTCH!! You explain when, how, why, where, how much- SO WELL. The visuals, everything.I can't thank you enough!!!!!!!!
@IONATVS2 жыл бұрын
Fun Fact: there was a period early in the life of the telephone where it WAS common for people to share phone numbers. It was called party line service and basically meant everyone in the building or on the block shared the same wire to the telephone exchange (as a cost cutting measure) so when a call came in, every phone on the line would ring and anyone who picked up could hear whoever was talking, and unless and until they hung up, nobody else could use it to call out. Needless to say it was a hotbed of neighborly snooping & gossip and people actually went to jail for hogging the line and refusing to hang up when others were trying to call emergency services.
@theintrovertguy4337 Жыл бұрын
yes, I remember it. Damnnnnnn
@ethanlamoureux530610 ай бұрын
We had party lines all over my area until the late 1990s. They had special phones (which you had to rent from the phone company) which only rang for your number, so you didn’t have to memorize your ring pattern like the old days, but all the rest of the problems remained. When you picked up the phone to make a call you might find it in use by your neighbor so you had to wait and try later. If someone talked a long time, it could challenge your patience. At least nobody was crazy enough to try getting on the internet with a dialup modem! Also, most exchanges in my area had local calling only within the exchange, so basically if you wanted to call the next town it was a long distance call, and billed by the minute. This was extra inconvenient on a party line because when you dialed another exchange, you had to wait for the operator to come on the line and ask you your phone number so they could bill the call to you. You could give them the number of one of your neighbors on the same line and they would bill your neighbor instead. Oh, and the operator said “Number please” so often than he was always hoarse and you could hardly understand him.
@IAmPhantomNoah2 жыл бұрын
Another solution some ISPs implemented to their network with the exhaustion of IPv4 addresses is Carrier-Grade NAT (CGNAT), where 1 Public IP is shared across multiple subscribers. Basically, it's like having another layer of NAT from your ISP and it works but there are a lot of downsides like you can't host stuff (since it's blocked from your ISP) without some clever tricks like reverse proxy (or something similar to the "Don't call me, I'll call you" analogy).
@Skyline_NTR2 жыл бұрын
Don't forget the problem of getting your true public ipv4 address blocked by a website/service if someone else sharing that public address got themselves blocked. Or that (without ipv6 or ipv6 support) a good chunk of online multiplayer games won't matchmake properly under CGNAT. The faster everyone (ISPs AND websites/services) adopts ipv6, the better.
@IAmPhantomNoah2 жыл бұрын
@@Skyline_NTR true that! Since CGNAT has a very strict firewall rule by design, you may find it difficult to host your multiplayer games. You can connect to someone but you can't host on your own without some help at least.
@lzdls2 жыл бұрын
Cgnat is hell with pfsense or any other load balancer
@DaniGrappler2 жыл бұрын
Dynamic VS Static public IP addresses, free the former, paid for the latter. That's what we got.
@rafaelpernil2 жыл бұрын
Exactly, I thought he was going to cover that in this video
@alsothejiraguy2 жыл бұрын
Fun fact: Storing your password and your 2FA in the same service is a great way to turn your 2FA into a 1FA
@Zerflef2 жыл бұрын
Just buy the stinkin SAAS!
@SimonBauer72 жыл бұрын
or into a 0FA... hack the password manager and goodbye your passwords...
@Farreach2 жыл бұрын
if the password manager is true to their word being encrypted as much as they are than it isn't a concern.. I been using Dashlane for years ..I am majoring in Computer Science I am very well-versed in Tech .... and a good password manager is encrypted ..Dashlane uses AES-256 encryption on the device.. believe me no one is hacking that for a very long time...The military uses this standard lmao....if you forgot your master password your not going to even be able to recover your passwords.. the weakness would be the master password.. only way to hack that is through social engineering. That is why it is good to use a large easily remembered but hard to guess password.. (EFF Dice-Generated Passphrases) 6-9 words is super hard to crack...Diceware & Passwords - Computerphile
@peterking85862 жыл бұрын
@@Farreach That’s why use password safes that use biometrics. There are 3 cornerstones to encryption, something you know (password), something you are (fingerprint), something you have (keycard). Using all three makes unauthorized access difficult.
@harrynelson92032 жыл бұрын
Can’t hack a notepad 📝
@_Arko442 жыл бұрын
Your videos are seriously helping me with my IT studies in school right now. Classes and textbooks are great, but your visual aids are the cherry on top. Thank you for another great video!
@thestig0072 жыл бұрын
Network Engineer here - I've learned more from KZbin than any school or book. Some people just learn easier with visuals and audio. KZbin makes learning easy.
@rosemarywacera25762 жыл бұрын
Hey,so you can be my teacher then🤗
@sushanshakya2 жыл бұрын
People being able to have the same IP address and the server still knowing which device to route the packet to was one of the biggest mysteries to me... Thanks Chuck... Love all your videos.
@Artropos Жыл бұрын
i guess mac address ?
@sushanshakya Жыл бұрын
@@Artropos They're in a different network. Their IP is relative to their network.
@paulmathew1214 Жыл бұрын
Chuck, I have read multiple articles and watched multiple videos regarding subnetting and it was confusing as hell. This series has made it so simple. I like how you mix in humor, and I get all the nerdy references :) Thank you so much!
@smokehf2 жыл бұрын
Have you seen what PinkPanda and its CEO Adam are up to?
@bigbelly26922 жыл бұрын
Yeah. Lots going on. I like the Loot connection.
@cesarg42 жыл бұрын
It’s last medium post is so bullish! Can’t wait to grow bamboo.
@visualcoco2 жыл бұрын
I work at a major Defense Contractor, and we just so happen to be reclaiming multiple /8s /11s and a bunch of /16s so that we can sell them back. you'd be amazed how many public IPs were being privately routed.
@davidmcken2 жыл бұрын
Given that the reseller market is about US$51 per IP and can only be sold in /24s or larger that's a good chunk of change to be leaving on the table. The cost will be pushed to customers is all that will happen. It actually helps incumbent providers maintain their position as a new entrant can't fight for more lucrative business contracts on even footing as most businesses will rather stick to IPv4 than invest in IPv6. I still find windows XP machines and the mantra "if it ain't broke don't fix it", I just document accordingly and wait for the impending security breach.
@400EMP2 жыл бұрын
Additionally, IPv6 won’t have a subnet mask displayed, but rather a CIDR, which is a shortcut way of telling you the subnet mask. It’ll usually be /64 meaning you can use 64 of the 128 bits that chuck was mentioning.
@James_Knott2 жыл бұрын
IPv4 also moved to CIDR many years ago.
@400EMP2 жыл бұрын
@@James_Knott that is true, but typically when configuring stuff like IPv4 addresses and routes, you’ll always be using the subnet mask alongside with the IP. An IPv4 CIDR just makes things easier to view what’s going on with it (imo). I might be still used to old devices however. If you have examples of newer devices being configured with CIDRs vs subnet masks, let me know!
@James_Knott2 жыл бұрын
@@400EMP I just took a look at my Ubiquiti Unifi access point. It has an address and netmask, where the netmask is 24. I have seen other gear that uses CIDR and not traditional mask. Another example is my computer. I run Linux and in the subnet mask box is /24. Yes, you have to know both forms and how to convert between them, but the old style mask is disappearing.
@400EMP2 жыл бұрын
@@James_Knott that’s cool to know! Thanks for letting me know. Probably for the best. I much prefer the CIDR. The subnet mask is unnecessary. All you really need to know is what bits are network and what are host, compare the CIDR number out of 32, and there ya go! CIDR is much more helpful and subnet masks make the process of subnetting even more complicated than it should be.
@James_Knott2 жыл бұрын
@@400EMP I learned both ways, when I took a TCP/IP course at a local college in 1995. Shortly after I read about IPv6 in the April 1995 issue of Byte magazine.
@Eggsec2 жыл бұрын
Chuck! I just passed my ccna!! Starter studying mid March. I took it couple hours ago online and passed it. I did a lot of reaeach for the material and study every morning from 3am til 7am prior work. It paid out. Thank you for the material you've provided.
@fakecubed2 жыл бұрын
Good job. Now study up and get your Amateur Extra Class radio license and network through the air.
@mukhammadolimov40512 жыл бұрын
well done
@miloszivkovic62562 жыл бұрын
Basically NAT is just a table that has two rows. First row is an ip from your local private network ie. what device made the request and second row is the ip of the target device ie. what website you went to. Whenever packet goes through, NAT rewrites the source with routers public IP and records the request in NAT table, when the response comes from the target the table is used to determine who made the request ie request is translated back to private IP. This is a very simple explanation there are a lot of nuances ie. what happens when two devices make a request to same website etc.
@MatthewStidham2 жыл бұрын
Over 200 devices... it would be interesting to see chuck do an nmap of his private network (redacting any information he can't share obviously)
@fordonmekochgalenskaper56652 жыл бұрын
It's not so hard to reach 200 in a smart home where everything is connected. If everything follow wifi standard
@PhrostyGaming2 жыл бұрын
I watched back at some of your videos from 3-4 years ago, and man, have your production skills improved tremendously. You are a god.
@thefrisianclause2 жыл бұрын
I like these series Chuck! Keep them coming! Also interested in your opinion about IPv6 :)
@TheMlerich30Ай бұрын
Dude, thank you so much for these vids. Going to college for Cyber and Data Security and for some reason they put us through the Cybersecurity coursework before the networking courses. These vids are helping fill the gaps
@karlybyrd1551 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much. I have no idea why nobody seems to be able to answer the simple question "Why do all routers have the same IP address?" Your answer for this was so freaking simple and made so much sense. In all my searching to that question I don't think anyone made a distinction between a public and private IP. Thank you thank you, I was so mystified. lol
@Darkk69692 жыл бұрын
IPv6 at first was daunting to setup in pfSense but once I have it working it's actually pretty slick. I only allow IPv6 SSH into one of my Linodes VMs since script kiddies are using IPv4 to find open ports. Since IPv6 address space is so huge it's almost impossible to find a server with open ports in short period of time.
@JacobP812 жыл бұрын
Also don't use the default port for SSH, and using Fail2Ban to temporarily block hackers IP addresses is probably a good idea too.
@Alexicumms5 ай бұрын
This just proves my point. Its not always the student, its 90% of the time the teacher. Ive struggled in the Danish education system for 17+ years, i always thought man i must be a real pr*ck loser. Then i find someone like network Chuck and things ive struggled to understand, coming from other teachers, is suddenly both fun and easy to understand! You're a great Teacher, thank you for making this stuff fun and igniting my thirst yet again!
@nyxdmage2 жыл бұрын
You are genuinely the best IT teacher I've ever had. Love how you make everything clear in a fun and engaging way, can't stop watching your videos! Hail Oprah 👑
@McShavey2 жыл бұрын
You've bridged the gaps in my knowledge about networking and how IP addresses work, and explained what NAT is in a router. Thank you very much! I always love finding new creators that help me learn new things like this. Definitely worth liking and subscribing to your channel. Again, you're a champion! :)
@wowpeter2 жыл бұрын
Network Chunk... This series is awesome... I have been trying to look for simple video like this so that I can show my family (who are not very tech savvy) the basic of computer networking and this is perfect. I will not be able to explain it as well as you do... Now all I have to do is ask them to watch your video hahaha awesome!!! 😎
@Whole_Note2 жыл бұрын
I have learned more about IP Addresses from watching 30 minutes of your channel than I have from years of messing with (and troubleshooting) devices at home.
@gareginasatryan67612 жыл бұрын
The private IP range had been used informally much longer. It was essentially part of the range that people squatted on by convention. RFC just made it official
@juhanakaarlehto77546 ай бұрын
11:37 for scale, the IPv6 address space is so big that each address in the IPv4 address space could be assigned a whole another IPv4 address space (so basically the whole pre-NAT internet) to it and that whole network would still fit inside the IPv6 address space.
@JacobP812 жыл бұрын
3:22 It was one of the band aids, the others being shared hosting where multiple domain names can share the same IP ("Name based Virtual Host"), and the other being carrior grade NAT.
@real_rivolta2 жыл бұрын
Video starts at: 2:48
@itsdaddymagic2 жыл бұрын
Legend
@PoPoWanObi2 жыл бұрын
Your passion for smart toilets are unmatched.
@JamieDobbs Жыл бұрын
Fantastic video series, I've passed the link on to my team to help with their understanding of IP addressing and subnets as you present it so well and in such an understandable manner - thanks! (I've work in IT for over 30 years and dealt with networking for almost 20 and I learned things too!)
@rakeau2 жыл бұрын
On the other hand, NAT has enabled people to drag their heels and delay IPv6 adoption by 25+ years. No joke - a literal quarter of a century and counting.
@MineGamer1532 жыл бұрын
Very educative and easy to learn. Just one thing to mention, in private IP table there was a mistake in subnet masks (8/12/16 prefix length)
@keithwolfe109010 ай бұрын
props on the the audio mixing in this series -- nice that it doesn't fight with your information.
@ElliottJayson2 жыл бұрын
The last 2 seconds of the video was golden. MIND BLOWN
@123gregyD6 ай бұрын
Thank you! This is coming from someone who was struggling with this topic prior to an exam.
@BobFrTube2 жыл бұрын
A nit, the original RFC I saw was 1994. I started experimenting with NATs in late 1994 before I made them the standard for home networking when I was at Microsoft. They were meant to be temporary till IPv6 but that's a longer story.
@leonsoldier74382 жыл бұрын
I learned a lot about NAT due to ALWAYS having issues with NAT on Xbox.
@pif50236 ай бұрын
This series is gold! Wassup with this outro music, banger. Never danced to a learning video! It paired well with the happiness of understanding NAT!
@the.adrianm2 жыл бұрын
We can always rely that Networkchuck will make a good video! Amazing video!
@dannydoyle84822 жыл бұрын
Love the video man, keep them coming. I’m new to the whole IT world currently studying for the A+ Core 2. I’m kind of like I should of started CCNA altogether 🙈. Love the content very helpful. Much love from Cork Ireland
@rosemarywacera25762 жыл бұрын
You can be my teacher and have me tuition classes🤗
@TechDaddyProxy Жыл бұрын
the "Big Oprah, littler Oprah" just gets me, dude. I'm absolutely loving your content and learning a ton.
@kennethmayang267511 ай бұрын
You are like the best teacher I never had. Would've taken IT course instead of HRM
@DonnaGuth Жыл бұрын
Your an excellent teacher..I'm a beginner..green as could be..but I was learning IPs cause my wifi got hacked .but I wasn't sure how to tell if some of my Wifi IPs were not of Spectrum ..but thanks this ..hels alot ..ur entertaining and u keep my attention
@FlaxTheSeedOne2 жыл бұрын
We will never run out of ipv6 addresses. The number is so astronomically large, that astronomy itself seems small. You could address every single atom in the observabale universe and still have a stupid amount of IPs leftover
@ShenLong9912 жыл бұрын
Yes, maybe... but i have currently 1 /64 IPv6 Adress-Space and 1 /56 IPv6 Space at my disposal... One at my vServer thats running a single instance of a website-service and one at home. Why? I dont know. I dont an ip adress for literally any Atom in my flat.
@Lewisking502 жыл бұрын
Pretty sure the number of atoms in the observable universe (~1e82) is much higher than the number of IPv6 addresses (3.4e38). You could, however, map every atom in a human body (~7e27) and still have a lot left.
@ShenLong9912 жыл бұрын
@@Lewisking50 What i wanted to express was likely something like "Lets just not make the same mistakes, please. even if we have that much of adresses for everyone. nobody needs a billion of adresses. Really. a couple of 1000 for a family, okay. a couple of 100000 for a midsized, familyowned company. Also okay, but literally more than for any atom in their flat?"
@Lewisking502 жыл бұрын
@@ShenLong991 Sure, you're probably right, if those aren't too much already. My reply was meant for OP though as I didn't @ you.
@ShenLong9912 жыл бұрын
@@Lewisking50 Oh, i'm sorry. i thought you answered me, my bad. Moving on.
@jennifermariepena Жыл бұрын
Thank you for making Networking easy to understand. My networking class this month was kicking my butt because I just couldn't understand I GET IT NOW :) !!
@alexhanson449 Жыл бұрын
Chuck, youre an amazing teacher. I really enjoy your style, you make this stuff way more interesting than any other teacher or youtuber ive seen
@zooteddd Жыл бұрын
I like how you sort of went backwards with your topics, I think it makes it easier to comprehend
@slee1130939 ай бұрын
NetworkChuck has mastered the art of teaching 😅. This dude makes it fun as hell to learn!
@eh58062 жыл бұрын
Hearing NAT described so enthusiastically as this wonderful, magical thing makes my soul hurt.
@Santu19392 жыл бұрын
he is so good at promoting his coffee. every time he sips his coffee, I'm sipping mine too. It's kinda like yawning.
@JacobP812 жыл бұрын
12:15 Yes I get a public IPv6 and public IPv4 address on my cell phone. Like I said one cell phone access point can divide the Class A private network into over 4 million networks allowing over 4 million phones to use the same public IPv4 address. That is one of the reasons IPv4 STILL works.
@jdkap2012 жыл бұрын
3:53 Actually it doesn't need to be - and often isn't - unique nowadays. That's due to having not a public IPv4 address, but rather a public IPv6 DS-Lite enabled address. DS-Lite uses one or multiple servers of the ISP to tunnel an IPv4 connection to your IPv6 address. Your public IPv4 address in that case is the address of the server that tunnels the connection to your IPv6 address. That IPv4 address is shared across multiple clients, hence it sucks if someone else gets that IP banned. A second example are mobile networks, where my device with a SIM card is given a public IPv4 pool address the moment it connects to the cell tower and goes online. Some time after the device disconnects the public IPv4 address will go back into the pool and eventually another device will get that address assigned. Neat to know when using an LTE router or a LTE USB stick. Again, it sucks if your address got blocked because of a previous user. 4:08 To top it off: You actually can have the same cell phone number on multiple devices with limitations. Most contracts have the option to get another SIM card for the same contract for a small monthly extra fee. You can call, send SMS/MMS and use mobile data on both SIM cards, while you can receive calls or SMS/MMS only on the primary SIM card (which you can set via a code or an app). I've got the primary SIM in my phone and the secondary SIM inside a portable LTE router.
@ahmedelrayan553210 ай бұрын
Kudos for you man, you're the best instructor there on the internet, you made this easy as a piece of cake
@miladyekleh2 жыл бұрын
Fun Fact: The NAT protocol can support over 60,000 simultaneous connections with a single WAN-side IP address for the router!
@ryanmcgowan306111 ай бұрын
11:16 "I'm afraid we might make the same mistakes." *We didn't, I assure you:* If added one more BIT to the IPv4 address, it would have DOUBLED in size. If added one more BYTE to the IPv4 address, it would have expanded by 256 times in size. IPv6 added 12 bytes! Each byte multiplies it to 256x larger than the previous byte. Do you know what that means??? We could give every grain of sand on the entire surface of Earth an IPv6 address. But wait, there's more: We could give every grain of sand within Earth an IPv6 address. But wait, there's more: We have enough left over to give every grain of sand to each of the 8 planets in the solar system an IPv6 address. But wait, there's more: We have enough left over to give every grain of sand to 8 planets for every star in the Milky Way Galaxy an IPv6 address. But wait, there's more: We have enough left over to give every grain of sand to 8 planets for every star in the Milky Way Galaxy *AND* Andromeda Galaxy an IPv6 address. But wait, there's more: We have enough left over to give every grain of sand to 8 planets per star in *56 MILLION GALAXIES* an IPv6 address. 3.4 * 10^38 is a massive, massive number: 3,400,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 addresses. That is 48,570,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 addresses for every human alive today. We did not make the same mistake this time.
@dailydopacat2 ай бұрын
Gal'thabtli trying to connect his personal Dyson sphere to the internet in 14,539AD: we made the same mistake
@johnpaoloii83012 жыл бұрын
Lol the music from toilet scene is 2010 polish meme-song that translates to "after eating your delicous soup, I don't move my ass off the toilet, this soup was with milk, i'm allegric to milk"
@wagmi_dude2 жыл бұрын
LoL, I'm Polish and you used that toilet song "po twojej pysznej zupie nie ruszam dupy z klopa"
@crowlsyong2 жыл бұрын
BRO EVERY VIDEO MAKES ME HAPPY 0:46
@lppixi51522 жыл бұрын
Fun fact My college of IT in Austria has a subject, with a free CCNA course.
@locus71068 ай бұрын
NetworkChuck dropping the naughtiest bangers before ending the video
@davidmako26962 жыл бұрын
This is so great, I love even your built-in commercials.
@rahulmunshi92583 ай бұрын
Dont even care about CCNA no more just want to see Chuck videos cuz its fun
@subsonicbass6 ай бұрын
9:42 “Let’s say my toilet wants to see some pictures of coffee” is a wild sentence 😂
@benjaminlynch99582 жыл бұрын
Awesome video. One question I have, and hopefully it’ll be addressed on a later video, is: how does your router keep track of data coming into your private IP and then route it to the appropriate device / private IP / MAC address? If you’re logged into KZbin for your channel, your daughter is playing a game (Minecraft, Roblox, whatever), and your wife is shopping on Amazon, how does the router keep all the incoming data packets going to the appropriate place?
@NickyHendriks2 жыл бұрын
This is something that won't fit into subnetting but it is dealt with in his CCNA-course I believe. The OSI-model comes in to play but also random temporary port forwarding which can be used for the data to come back in which is handled by NAT. It's quite technical but very interesting! His (unfortunately incomplete) CCNA-course literally taught me more about networking than I had taught myself in the last couple of years.
@VyLa5492 жыл бұрын
Thanks to the routing table in the router I think.
@JacobP812 жыл бұрын
In addition to IP addresses there are also port numbers. That helps with the NAT routing.
@ren82937 ай бұрын
I’m just glad I’m not the guy in the year 2524 learning about IPv4 AND IPv6 as limited technology. Then having to learn how IPv24 works (we skipped 7-23 bc you know)
@markjosephmartinez9170 Жыл бұрын
I just came from the future of the year 2456, in the end, we still created IPv32 a combination of everything you see on your keyboard and more alphanumeric characters that aren't created yet in this timeline. Live long and Prosper!
@Talha27 Жыл бұрын
Weird people are everywhere 😂
@HugoLopez-nm1qn Жыл бұрын
So far this series has been amazing!
@davidmcken2 жыл бұрын
NAT is so amazing lets do it twice!!! Said no one ever... All NAT did was kick the can down the road, like a politician... Sorry Chuck, but NAT is a band-aid, its great what the technical guys managed to figure out to keep things running but even from a security perspective any stateful firewall can provide the same security NAT provides.
@libertarianredpilled59322 жыл бұрын
the loopback subnet is so large, because the original implementation of the IP protocol wasn't masked. The network ID was determined by the first bits of the IP.
@anthonyj7482 жыл бұрын
Should give us a video on how to set up a 100% home server rack with NAS and wifi management with everything. In one rack how to configure and manage all that.
@foober5022 жыл бұрын
Ay the king has posted
@AyushTH2 жыл бұрын
"Although I'm scared that we will make the same mistakes" Proceeds to say that there are 2^128 combinations (3,402,837,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,0 combinations)... At that point, our mistakes matter very little.
@RockSleeper2 жыл бұрын
what's crazy is IPv6 has 79 octillion times as many addresses as IPv4. That's about 4.29 Billion times 79,162,418,842,315,673,828,125,000,000! I know it's just trivial math but it's still blowing my mind.
@prakritspromusic2 жыл бұрын
Last -_- Edit :- 1:42 I just went in shock that you revealed you card details 😂 but after I saw the exp. date, I just started laughing hard🤣🤣
@phs1252 жыл бұрын
Just a regular internet user here. I figured out a long time ago that private ip address exists, I just didn't know that's what they're called. It's intranet and internet for me. All my devices would be on an intranet, and the router is the one that talks to the internet. And I assumed internet still knew all our ipv6 addresses, which I'm probably wrong about. And I assumed same thing was going on with phones. All our phones have a private IP address, they connect to the tower. Then tower sends out the same with its public IP address. And I assumed wifi devices get 192.168.1.X because there are less devices. And cellphones get more complicated addresses because more devices connect to a single tower...
@SinanFM9692 жыл бұрын
Hello Chuck.. Iam a big fan.. But in this video you forgot to hide the default gateway while ipconfig 😉 CCNA guy watching you here 😉 Keep going.. Very nice content like usual.. And we appreciate if you can explain the Wi-Fi 6 in another video please. Big respect from all IT to you from UK
@Bentleys-Mom2 жыл бұрын
You are totally amazing at what you do. You have motivated me to learn more and even change my profession.
@chingyoshiroyotsu122 жыл бұрын
Hey Network Chuck please make shorts , it will help us for daily CCNA motivation
@hacks_hackers2 жыл бұрын
You just saved my linkedin assesment on networking; with no CCNA cert LOL....Dope vid man
@juniorwebd2 жыл бұрын
I'm happy to see you posting videos more often. It would be great to see a new one everyday 😄 you're the best
@Xershade2 жыл бұрын
So basically NAT solved the IP problem the same way I solved my 6144 channel limit problem with Applied Energistics in Minecraft, and split it up with sub-networking. The thing I love about it though is it's basically infinite. Each 255 subnetworks can have 255 subnetworks which can have 255 subnetworks which can have 255 subnetworks and oh look one network is back to the starting number, just need enough nodes is all. XD
@420birdman Жыл бұрын
I'm glad that you know the joke about spending more on coffee than IT. Love your work.
@WafflesCookToo2 жыл бұрын
Ur like the tech vsauce. Oh no, we ran out of ip addresses. *But did we ?* Hey IT-Sauce, Chuck here
@MegaManNeo2 жыл бұрын
Kid you not, Chuck, my mobile provider here in Germany still uses NAT-IPv4 for regular customers. Without Tailscale, Zerotier or another self hosted VPN, I couldn't even talk home because my connection at home uses native v6 with shared v4.
@MegaManNeo2 жыл бұрын
@BroadTeamFaba I believe this depends on the provider and its implementation, really. Here in Germany, T-Mobile offers native v6 for everyone who pays for their service, using prepaid with them however gives you nothing but NAT v4. Cable, fibre and copper all come with native v6 and depending on how long you are with the provider, either full or shared v4. And in my case, see what I wrote above. It's a really mixed bag and if anything the guys who implemented v6 are to blame for not thinking of a compatibility layer that works both ways in all cases.
@PvtAnonymous2 жыл бұрын
@@MegaManNeo and not even starting on the stone-age position about static IPv6 of certain ISPs *cough* Telekom *cough*. If I could do what I actually want (hosting my own small server with Nextcloud and Bitwarden and whatnot) I'd really like to stop my reliance on DDNS services. Right now it's actually more comfortable for me to just stay with IPv4 and have a DDNS set up instead of going into IPv6 (and basically restructuring my whole network) to just get to the same point I am at right now. And what is the other solution? Yeah, going for a business plan which is like 90 bucks a month for a basic 100/40 connection. I really would like IPv6 to succeed, but certain people at certain companies make it very difficult to enjoy. At this point everyone could get a static IPv6. It's also totally possible technically since there's no shortage. But the greed for money always wins.
@BasedMando Жыл бұрын
What the hell is a toilet IP address? Does an alarm go off when you forget to place the seat a certain subjectively preferable way; or when you place the tp front facing; does it alert the wife when you're in there too long; or God forbid you forgot to flush! How does it malfunction? If you breach some t&cs of the toilet partition protocol; would it just straight up explode and expose all your darkest secrets on the the 255 IP address. Scary stuff Chuck!
@midimusicforever2 жыл бұрын
We're gonna YOLO them Ipv6 addresses too one day!
@rubikfan12 жыл бұрын
Just an ad-on. Going from 2^32 to 2^128 is huge. Every number you had 32 33 34 ect. Means you double the raw amound of ip adresses. So going to 128. Is mega. You double it 98 times.
@quinton16612 жыл бұрын
Not really though, since most subnets to users will be /64. Don't worry, there's still plenty to go around. /64 is still more than enough. And hey, if we ever do run out of that, then we can recover a single /48, properly manage it, and be good forever again.
@rubikfan12 жыл бұрын
@@quinton1661 good to know. Its why i said raw amound.
@LokiScarletWasHere2 жыл бұрын
Aaaaaackshually we didn't skip v5. IPv5 was dropped before it could go public because it used IPv4's address space. IPv5 lives on as VoIP, a concept rather than a protocol of its own.
@JacobP812 жыл бұрын
My cell phone ISP actually divide up the local IPs and give my phone a very small network with as little as 4 local IP addresses in my phones network. So one access point can have over 4 million networks, each with 4 IPs. Class A private IP with a subnet mask 255.255.255.252. And the only devices that need to be in that network are the smartphone and the access point. The highest and lowest IP in a network are never asigned to a device. However there is now a range of IP addresses taken from a public IP range that is specifically reserved for carrier NAT (CGNAT).
@gigachad697752 жыл бұрын
The way he explains things and speaks makes me find watching ads interesting! Good job! I love your channel!
@sharwinshreds2 жыл бұрын
Happy to see the next episode 😊😊
@finskou Жыл бұрын
You, sir, are the teacher we ALL NEED.
@gern_blandston2 жыл бұрын
me: looks up the random IP address DOD: let's keep an eye on that guy thanks Chuck.
@samjonesmartin2 жыл бұрын
glad to see im not alone there then.
@thebrandteam18112 жыл бұрын
You forgot to add your bait title, "You have to learn LEARN THIS RIGHT NOW!!!!"
@shaginc26592 жыл бұрын
dude you misspelled dashlane in the start of your video lol i love all your videos you give me such motivation although the coffee keeps me up but ill leave you to it
@PVMChannel Жыл бұрын
Fun fact: chuck's credit card info is visible at 1:40 (its propably a fake one)
@KgRu1eS11 ай бұрын
thanks for the video! I'm not an IT guy but I am able to follow your videos.
@x0rn3122 жыл бұрын
"Oprah will know, that picture is for toilet" -Network Chuck what a sentence
@itouchapplemaster2 жыл бұрын
It’s weird, we used to say “NEVER SHARE YOUR PASSWORDS WITH ANYONE!” Now we share them using applications built by others. 🤣
@syedmuhammedabbasrizvi39002 жыл бұрын
Mannnn!!!!!! That was all INCREDIBLE.🔥🔥🔥 💯💯 HUGE RESPECT & LOVE FOR YOU FROM PAKISTAN 🇵🇰 ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️