What does CCNA stand for?
A. Cisco Certified Network Administrator
B. Cisco Certified Network Associate
C. Certified Circuitry in Networking Apprentice
D. Calico Cats of North America
Answers were Sorted based on User's Feedback
Answer / m haja bahurudeen
Ans : B
CCNA - Cisco Certified Network Associate
CCNP - Cisco Certified Network Programmer
| Is This Answer Correct ? | 3 Yes | 3 No |
What is the administrative distance for RIP? A.) 100 B.) 90 C.) 120 D.) 110
Which classes are assignable?
You would like to have a notation that when a user issues the command 'show interface serial 0', a line is displayed indicating that, 'This is the connection to Company A.' What interface command would accomplish this? A.) banner motd #This is the connection to Company A.# B.) interface This is the connection to Company A. C.) This cannot be done for an individual interface. D.) description This is the connection to Company A. E.) banner This is the connection to Company A. F.) display This is the connection to Company A.
what is difference between 1 pap and chap(quite easy but need on line answer) 2 chap and ms-chap(plz describe briefly) now i have posted the question is there any one to help me?
what's the difference between Symmetric and Asymmetric cryptosystem?
You want to clear the outputs on your serial interface showing errors on the interface. Which command do you type?
Which of the following would be displayed by the command 'SHOW CDP NEIGHBOR DETAIL'? A.) The incoming/outgoing port. B.) The hardware platform. C.) One address per protocol. D.) Amount of Flash Memory Available E.) The routers hostname. F.) The subnet mask, if IP is configured.
what is the difference between a ‘half-duplex’ and a ‘full-duplex’ system?
Identify the 2 commands that display the clock rate configured on the serial0 interface? A.) show serial0 B.) show interface serial0 C.) show clock rate serial 0 D.) show controllers serial 0 E.) show running-config
What is the administrative distance for IGRP? A.) 90 B.) 120 C.) 110 D.) 100
What is 10base2 ethernet lans?
What is a back off on an 802.3 networks? A. It is latency in store and forward switching B. It is the time used for token passing from machine to machine C. It is the retransmission delay that is enforced when a collision occurs D. It is the result of two nodes transmitting at the same time. The frames from each transmitting device collide and are damaged