Networking For Dummies. Doug Lowe. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Doug Lowe
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
Серия:
Жанр произведения: Зарубежная компьютерная литература
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781119748687
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target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="#fb3_img_img_ca762df8-b9d1-504e-94d8-c2bac217d09a.png" alt="Technical Stuff"/> Hold it — technical details lurk just around the corner. Read on only if you have a pocket protector.

      

Pay special attention to this icon; it lets you know that some particularly useful tidbit is at hand — perhaps a shortcut or a little-used command that pays off big.

      

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      In addition to the material in the print or e-book you’re reading right now, this product also comes with some access-anywhere goodies on the web. Check out the free Cheat Sheet for links to useful websites for networking information, private IP address ranges for networks, and more. To get this Cheat Sheet, simply go to www.dummies.com and type Networking For Dummies Cheat Sheet in the Search box.

      Yes, you can get there from here. With this book in hand, you’re ready to plow right through the rugged networking terrain. Browse through the Table of Contents and decide where you want to start. Be bold! Be courageous! Be adventurous! Above all, have fun!

      Getting Started with Networking

      Find out what a network is and what you can do with one.

      Set up Windows and Mac computers to work on a network.

      Access network resources such as shared storage and network printers.

      Use Microsoft Office and other software on a network.

      Let’s Network!

      IN THIS CHAPTER

      

Getting a handle on networks

      

Considering why networking is useful (and is everywhere)

      

Telling the difference between servers and clients

      

Looking under the hood at the network operating system

      

Asking “How does it work when a network works if a network works for me?” (Say what?)

      

Assessing how networks change computing life

      

Identifying (and offering sympathy to) the network administrator

      

Comparing servers to clients: What have they got that you don’t got?

      Computer networks get a bad rap in the movies. Beginning in the 1980s, the Terminator movies featured Skynet, a computer network that becomes self-aware, takes over the planet, builds deadly terminator robots, and sends them back through time to kill everyone unfortunate enough to have the name Sarah Connor. In the Matrix movies, a vast and powerful computer network enslaves humans and keeps them trapped in a simulation of the real world. And in the 2015 blockbuster Spectre, James Bond goes rogue (again) to prevent the Evil Genius Ernst Blofeld from taking over the world (again) by linking the computer systems of all the world’s intelligence agencies together to form a single all-powerful evil network that spies on everybody.

      Now that you’re over your fear of networks, you’re ready to breeze through this chapter. It’s a gentle, even superficial, introduction to computer networks, with a slant toward the concepts that can help you use a computer that’s attached to a network. This chapter goes easy on the details; the detailed and boring stuff comes later.

      A network is nothing more than two or more computers connected by a cable or by a wireless radio connection so that they can exchange information.

      Of course, computers can exchange information in ways other than networks. Most of us have used what computer nerds call the sneakernet. That’s where you copy a file to a flash drive or other portable storage device and then walk the data over to someone else’s computer. (The term sneakernet is typical of computer nerds’ feeble attempts at humor.)

      The whole problem with the sneakernet is that it’s slow, and it wears a trail in your carpet. One day, some penny-pinching computer geeks discovered that connecting computers with cables was cheaper than replacing the carpet every six months. Thus, the modern computer network was born.

      You can create a simple computer network by hooking together all the computers in your office with cables and using the computer’s network interface (an electronic circuit that resides inside your computer and has a special jack on the computer’s backside). Then you tweak a few simple settings in the computer’s operating system (OS) software, and voilà! You have a working network. That’s all there is to it.

      If you don’t want to mess with cables, you can create a wireless network instead. In a wireless network, the computers use wireless network adapters that communicate via radio signals. All modern laptop computers have built-in wireless network adapters, as do most desktop computers. (If yours doesn’t, you can purchase a separate wireless network adapter that plugs into one of the computer’s USB ports.)

       Router: Connects your computers to the Internet

       Switch: Allows you to connect two or more computers together with cables

       Wireless access point: Lets you connect computers and other devices to your network without using cables

      In the figure, you can see that two computers — Bart’s gaming computer and Homer’s old 1989 computer — are connected via cables to the switch component of the home