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Common operational misconceptions
- Subject: Common operational misconceptions
- From: lykinsbd at gmail.com (Brett Lykins)
- Date: Thu, 16 Feb 2012 07:11:42 -0500
- In-reply-to: <[email protected]>
- References: <[email protected]>
The idea that the network will always match the documentation.
I have walked into many projects where this is not the case, but a
Junior Admin working with me can't seem to get around the fact that
the Visio we were handed isn't to be trusted and we've got to
double-check everything.
-Brett Lykins
On Feb 15, 2012, at 3:47 PM, John Kristoff <jtk at cymru.com> wrote:
> Hi friends,
>
> As some of you may know, I occasionally teach networking to college
> students and I frequently encounter misconceptions about some aspect
> of networking that can take a fair amount of effort to correct.
>
> For instance, a topic that has come up on this list before is how the
> inappropriate use of classful terminology is rampant among students,
> books and often other teachers. Furthermore, the terminology isn't even
> always used correctly in the original context of classful addressing.
>
> I have a handful of common misconceptions that I'd put on a top 10 list,
> but I'd like to solicit from this community what it considers to be the
> most annoying and common operational misconceptions future operators
> often come at you with.
>
> I'd prefer replies off-list and can summarize back to the list if
> there is interest.
>
> John