There are two main types of networks, peer-to-peer, and client/server. A question for school, is when the area is gray as to what type of network you're working on: Take for instance the servers for forums. I am assuming they would be client/server for security reasons, but am not 100% on it. Am I right?
No worries, you are not answering a test question or anything. I'm just trying to put the info in this chapter into place that I'm reading on this. Servers have always eluded me.
Thanks.
Types of networks
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- dedanna1029
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Types of networks
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No gods, no masters.
"A druid is by nature anarchistic, that is, submits to no one."
http://uk.druidcollege.org/faqs.html
Re: Types of networks
dedanna1029 wrote:There are two main types of networks, peer-to-peer, and client/server. A question for school, is when the area is gray as to what type of network you're working on: Take for instance the servers for forums. I am assuming they would be client/server for security reasons, but am not 100% on it. Am I right?
Yes you are.
Internet forums are on a server.
per to per is direct communications between PC's; you use it for sharing files in your network etc. Torrents use this too.
This is the very short version though....
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Re: Types of networks
Thanks. I may be asking about other things as I think of them. This course is dragging for me. It's the one where time goes the slowest, is the earliest in the morning, and you wonder if you'll ever get anywhere in understanding any of it. The textbook itself prepares us for certification (Network+ Guide to Networks, Fifth Edition, by Tamara Dean), and it's something that I really don't give a flip about being certified in. I took it because all I wanted to know was how to run me a very basic and simple server, something that has never clicked after all these years in computing. I honestly don't think I'll ever be able to remember everything in this course. :p
Re: Types of networks
Is depending on what the node is doing.
Here is how I see it...
When a Node connects to another and communicate, is Peer To Peer.
When a Node connects to Multiple systems is a Server.
A Server or a Personal Computer is hardware irrelevant. What makes a Server a Server is/are the services provided by the system.
You can convert any node to advertise a service and becomes a server. In my IT days, we used to use a PC with a Share Directory as a Ghosting Server. Worked really well.
A server does not need to be the most powerful computer in the Network; that is a misconception.
Here is how I see it...
When a Node connects to another and communicate, is Peer To Peer.
When a Node connects to Multiple systems is a Server.
A Server or a Personal Computer is hardware irrelevant. What makes a Server a Server is/are the services provided by the system.
You can convert any node to advertise a service and becomes a server. In my IT days, we used to use a PC with a Share Directory as a Ghosting Server. Worked really well.
A server does not need to be the most powerful computer in the Network; that is a misconception.