RE: lab diagram

From: Reed, John (John.D.Reed@xxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Tue Dec 28 1999 - 00:17:18 GMT-3


   
Certainly you can draw as many pictures as you like,

I asked my proctor for more paper, in fact. One of the first things I did,
was to take the notebook, and pull all of their red diagrams out of the
spiral binder, and placed them where I could refer to them.

I drew a separate diagram for each protocol, so I could clearly and quickly
see what was going on. I had a diagram for the physical layer, and then
each time they introduced a protocol, I ripped a new sheet from the pad of
paper they give you.

But be careful not to spend too much time drawing and writing. Keep those
typing fingers going as fast as possible. You don't get any points for
having the configuration on paper, if you can't ping it, or see it in a
routing table...

JR
two months till next test...

John.D.Reed@compaq.com <mailto:John.D.Reed@digital.com>
Compaq Professional Services
Columbia, South Carolina 29212

-----Original Message-----
From: zhencai [mailto:zhencai@home.com]
Sent: Monday, December 27, 1999 5:05 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: lab diagram

Hi,

I know when doing lab test, we are asked to draw a topology diagram. I also
noticed that when you put everything, ip addresses, ipx addresses, appletalk
addresses, etc... in one paper, it's pretty messed up. I myself can't tell
which one is which. Is it possible to draw an ip diagram and then another
non-ip diagram on another paper?
Thanks a lot.

Zhen Cai



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