Episodios

  • Episode 184: Network Troubleshooting Methodology Recap and Exam Readiness
    Jul 20 2025

    To wrap up the series, this episode reviews the full troubleshooting methodology—from identifying the problem to documenting the fix. We walk through common scenarios, showing how the steps apply in real life and what tools are best suited for each phase. You’ll revisit techniques for isolating symptoms, confirming theories, and verifying solutions with clarity and structure.

    We also provide exam tips for recognizing troubleshooting questions, managing time under pressure, and eliminating distractor answers. With this recap, you’ll finish the course with a complete understanding of not only how to build and manage a network, but how to diagnose and repair it with professionalism. You’re now ready for both the exam—and the job.

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    13 m
  • Episode 183: BYOD, Licensing Issues, and Troubleshooting Oddities
    Jul 20 2025

    Not every issue fits into neat categories. In this episode, we address edge-case problems like Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) compatibility, expired licenses on security appliances, and odd client behaviors that defy conventional logic. You’ll learn how mobile OS updates, unsupported encryption protocols, or insufficient license capacity can cause mysterious connectivity issues.

    We also touch on VPN quirks, DNS suffix misbehavior, and strange firewall rules inherited from years past. This episode prepares you for the “weird ones”—issues that require curiosity, documentation, and sometimes creative thinking to resolve. The final part of troubleshooting is adapting to the unknown.

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    18 m
  • Episode 182: Optical, Hardware, and Performance Issues — Identifying and Resolving Problems
    Jul 20 2025

    This episode revisits advanced troubleshooting at the hardware and optical layer. We cover transceiver problems, dirty fiber connectors, power mismatches, and switch backplane limitations. You'll learn how to read interface stats for clues, test suspect links, and isolate faults in a complex network environment.

    We also explain how hardware limits—such as CPU, memory, or buffer overruns—can degrade throughput and cause latency spikes. Recognizing these bottlenecks and addressing them quickly is key to performance stability. This episode ties together visibility, monitoring, and hands-on testing for deep diagnostics.

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    14 m
  • Episode 181: DNS and NTP Failures — Troubleshooting Name and Time Resolution
    Jul 20 2025

    DNS and NTP are often invisible—until they fail. This episode shows how to diagnose and fix issues with domain name resolution and time synchronization, both of which affect authentication, connectivity, and performance. You’ll learn how to use nslookup, dig, and ntpq to troubleshoot problems and interpret server behavior.

    We also cover how expired DNS records, cache poisoning, NTP drift, and firewall blocks can wreak havoc silently. Fixing these problems requires awareness of both the protocol and the environment. This episode ensures you can spot and resolve these hidden causes of major disruptions.

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    15 m
  • Episode 180: Asymmetric Routing, Multicast Flooding, and ACL Misconfigurations
    Jul 20 2025

    Some network issues are subtle, involving advanced concepts like asymmetric routing, multicast flooding, and access control list (ACL) errors. This episode explains how asymmetric routing—where traffic returns on a different path than it arrived—can confuse firewalls and lead to dropped packets. We discuss how to diagnose and design around this behavior using symmetric paths and session tracking.

    Next, we cover multicast traffic that floods segments due to missing IGMP snooping, and how ACLs applied in the wrong direction or with missing statements can break services silently. These are the kinds of advanced problems that separate good network techs from great ones—and this episode gives you the tools to join the latter group.

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    15 m
  • Episode 179: Collision Domains, Broadcast Storms, and Routing Loops
    Jul 20 2025

    Poor network segmentation can lead to serious Layer 2 and Layer 3 problems. In this episode, we explain how excessive collision domains on legacy hubs or poorly configured switches can slow performance and cause retransmissions. We also dive into broadcast storms—where unchecked broadcast traffic floods the network—and routing loops, which occur when routers send traffic in circles due to misconfiguration.

    You’ll learn how STP, TTL, and route summarization prevent these issues, and how to recognize early signs of loops or broadcast congestion. These problems can be catastrophic if not caught quickly. This episode equips you to recognize, prevent, and respond to them before they spiral out of control.

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    15 m
  • Episode 178: Routing Troubleshooting — Missing Routes, DHCP, and Address Conflicts
    Jul 20 2025

    Routing issues can silently break connectivity—even if everything looks fine at Layer 2. In this episode, we diagnose common routing problems, including missing default routes, misconfigured static routes, and incorrectly advertised subnets. You'll learn how to use ping, traceroute, and routing tables to spot when traffic is being dropped or misrouted.

    We also explore DHCP-related routing issues and IP conflicts caused by overlapping pools or rogue servers. If users can reach some destinations but not others, it’s probably a routing issue—and this episode teaches you how to spot and fix it quickly. Good routing visibility leads to fast resolutions.

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    15 m
  • Episode 177: Network Foundations — VLAN, Interface, and Configuration Checks
    Jul 20 2025

    Sometimes network issues stem from the basics: incorrect VLAN assignment, disabled interfaces, or outdated configurations. This episode walks through foundational network checks that resolve a surprising number of connectivity issues. You'll learn how to verify trunk ports, check interface status, review MAC address tables, and ensure endpoints are in the correct VLAN.

    We also cover configuration drift—when devices slowly fall out of sync due to manual changes or failed updates. This type of issue is common in growing networks and easy to overlook. The key takeaway? Don’t skip the basics. This episode shows how a few quick checks can save hours of troubleshooting.

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    14 m