Internet Marketing: E-customer, Can’t you do it the way I like it?

Posted by arlene

Come on! Give the e-customer what he wants and stop messing him about. There is nothing very enjoyable about spending money on stuff that isn’t quite right because he can’t buy it the way he wants it.
Personalization
Personalization should mean exactly that. It must take the scope of `personal’ marketing beyond a glorified mailshot that proves […]

Measuring the Cost of an Internet Program Customer Lost

Posted by arlene

Sending irrelevant and poorly targeted email to customers is costly, not in offline terms of paper, printing, and postage, but in terms of something even more valuable: Every customer who disengages from an email marketing program is a lost opportunity to realize value from that customer in the future. If the customer disengages completely, the […]

How Wiretapping and Lie Detectors Work continue…

Posted by arlene

How Legal Wire tapping Works
CALEA requires that communications providers allow law enforcement officials to be able to listen in on phone conversations and get information about those phone calls, but only when the law enforcement agency has gotten approval for the tap.
The law enforcement agency goes before a judge and presents reasons a wiretap is […]

How Wiretapping and Lie Detectors Work

Posted by arlene

Throughout the history of the United States, one of the greatest political tensions has been that which balances personal privacy against the need for law enforcement to protect individuals and the country as a whole.
That tension has been with us from the very earliest days of the Republic. The Founding Fathers were extremely cognizant of […]

The Internet Protocol (IP) continue…

Posted by arlene

web-hosting

IP Addressing

Posted by arlene

Although most people think of IP as the transport protocol used by higher-level protocols, one of its more important functions is to provide the address space used by the TCP/IP suite. The difficulty of having to create a routing table that consists of hundreds of millions of actual hardware addresses, providing for no built-in organization […]

The Address Resolution Protocol—Resolving IP Addresses to Hardware Addresses

Posted by arlene

As just discussed, IP provides a logical hierarchical address space that makes routing data from one network to another a simple task. When the datagram arrives at the local subnet, however, another protocol comes into play. The Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) is used to resolve the IP address to the hardware, to the address of […]

The BOOTP Request/Reply Mechanism

Posted by arlene

Because it is usually implemented in a read-only memory (ROM) chip, the BOOTP protocol client is a simple, concise bit of code. The exchange of UDP messages between the client and the BOOTP server consists of a series of requests and replies. The same packet format is used for both types of messages with an […]

BOOTP and Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol

Posted by arlene

photo, font, PHP, web-design

Taking BOOTP One Step Further: DHCP

Posted by arlene

Even though diskless workstations are a small percentage of the total number of network nodes in the world today, the concept of receiving configuration information from a central server has not gone away. The Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) was developed after BOOTP as a means for providing a workstation (or any other network device) […]

The DHCP Packet Format and Additional Options

Posted by arlene

Similar to BOOTP, DHCP uses a request/reply mechanism, and the packet format is almost the same for both to provide for backward compatibility. The layout of the packet used by DHCP looks very much like the layout of the BOOTP packet, with a few exceptions. The first 11 fields are the same. However, the last […]

Installing and Configuring a DHCP Server on part 2

Posted by arlene

PHP

Installing and Configuring a DHCP Server on

Posted by arlene

Installing a DHCP server on Windows 2000 or Windows 2003 Servers is just as simple as most application installs. However, you’ll need to have some information ready before you begin the installation. You will need to know the range of addresses that the server will administer and lease to clients. If you have any servers […]

Providing Support for BOOTP Clients

Posted by arlene

The Windows 2000/2003 DHCP servers provide support for BOOTP clients. The Default BOOTP user class of options is used to configure the information that is supplied to these clients. Although standard BOOTP servers require that the server be configured in advance with a table of client hardware addresses and corresponding IP addresses, Windows 2000/Server 2003 […]

What Is APIPA?

Posted by arlene

If a client is configured to use DHCP, what happens if no DHCP server is available on the network? Starting with Windows 98, Microsoft Windows clients can use Automatic Private IP Addressing (APIPA). This is not a solution for a large network. It is for use on small LANs, such as a home office with […]

Reservations and Exclusions

Posted by arlene

Some computers or other networked devices, such as routers or printers, might need to keep the same IP address all the time. For example, Microsoft very strongly suggests you be sure that your DHCP server has a static, unchanging address. There are two ways you can be sure a particular computer or device keeps the […]

Configuring a Router or WAP to Provide DHCP

Posted by arlene

Many small- to medium-sized networks use the router that provides Internet access as a DHCP server, using it to provide network addresses to client PCs. Configuring a router to act as a DHCP server is not difficult (most routers are configured to provide IP addresses by default), but you should be familiar with the process […]

Master and Slave NIS Servers

Posted by arlene

window servers, web hosting

Installing and Configuring Printers on Windows Servers

Posted by arlene

All versions of Windows server operating systems support multiple printing protocols. In this section you will learn how to install and configure printers using Windows NT, Windows 2000, and Windows XP. Although Windows XP Professional is a client operating system, it is included here because it can provide print services in a small network (such […]

Network Cables continue…

Posted by arlene

Network Cable Connectors
A 10BASE-2 network uses a different kind of connector than a 10BASE-T/100BASE-T network does. You should pay attention to the details when ordering connectors (if you plan to make cables yourself) or when ordering ready-made cables that have the connectors attached. When upgrading to twisted-pair wiring, I’ve already suggested that you use Category […]

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