NetBIOS White Papers
MCSA/MCSE Exam 70-291 Exam Cram: Managing Name Resolution
Overview Each machine on a computer network is assigned a unique network address. Computers communicate with each other across networks by connecting to these network addresses. These numbers, also known as Internet Protocol (IP) addresses, consist of four groups of numbers, or octets, and can be difficult for people to remember. To solve this dilemma, a system was developed whereby people can use "Friendly" names that are then translated automatically into IP addresses that computers use to locate each other and to communicate. The software that translates these names to network addresses is called the Domain Name System (DNS). This paper introduces the Windows Server 2003 implementation of DNS.
| Publisher | Pearson Education | File Format | HTML |
|---|---|---|---|
| Date Published | December 2003 | Downloads | 202 |
| Format | White Papers | ||
| Topics | |||
Domain Name Service (DNS)
In the early days of the ARPANET, the forerunner to today's Internet, there were only a small number of computers attached to the network. As the ARPANET continued to grow,...
An Overview of Link Local Multicast Name Resolution
When a user on a corporate network needs to access some resource off of another computer, the user usually specifies the remote system's NetBIOS name when establishing the connection. This...
Bensley FB-Dimm Performance/Thermal Management
This presentation is intended for system engineers, thermal engineers, BIOS engineers. The presentation provides comprehensive FB-DIMM thermal protection and support better acoustics and performance. The presentation shows how BF BIOS...
Planning, Implementing, and Maintaining a Name Resolution Infrastructure for MCSE Exam 70-293
In today's well-connected network-centric world, name resolution is a critical component of any Windows Server 2003 network. The Windows Internet Naming Service (WINS) has fallen out of favor with the...
MCSA/MCSE Exam 70-291 Exam Cram: Managing Name Resolution
Each machine on a computer network is assigned a unique network address. Computers communicate with each other across networks by connecting to these network addresses. These numbers, also known as...



