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MCITP: Enterprise Administrator Certification Training Windows Server 2008

MCITP: Enterprise Administrator is the equivalent of MCSE for Windows Server 2008.

MCITP: Enterprise Administrator training boot camp validates your ability to:

  • Design Windows Server infrastructures, evaluate and recommend new technology solutions

  • Serve as an escalation point for infrastructure issues

  • Develop client and server best practices for other teams, such as engineering, development, and operations

  • Keep policy current for authentication, identity, and access management

  • Provide guidance in implementing security policies that affect the infrastructure on multiple levels

  • Participate in application reviews on security and

  • Ensure that the applications adhere to standard security guidelines and practices.

 

 

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MCSE : Security Specialist

Protocols

 

Protocols are software and must be installed on network components that need them. Computers can communicate with each other only if they use the same protocol. If the protocol used by a computer in a network is not compatible with the protocol used by another computer, the two computers cannot exchange information. A variety of protocols are available for use in specific network environments. Although each protocol facilitates basic network communication, each has a different function and accomplishes different tasks. You can understand the function of different protocols by examining the standard model for networks—the Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) reference model. This model is built around a set of seven protocol layers, and each layer is responsible for some function that assists in the transmission of data over the network.

According to the OSI conceptual model, several protocols must work together to ensure the proper transmission of data. In reality, this is achieved with the help of a protocol stack. A protocol stack is a collection of protocols that function together to transmit data across a network of computers.

 

Types of Protocols

 

Two types of protocols are available today: open and vendor-specific.

 

Open Protocols

Open protocols are protocols that are written to publicly known industry standards. A protocol that adheres to these industry standards is compatible with other protocols written to the same standards. Open protocols are

nonproprietary (not privately owned). A common example of an open protocol is Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP), which is used as the standard for communication over the Internet.

 

Vendor-Specific Protocols

Vendor-specific protocols are proprietary and have been developed by different vendors for use in specific environments. For example, Novell provides a set of protocols, such as Internetwork Packet  Exchange/Sequenced Packet Exchange (IPX/SPX), developed specifically for its NetWare architecture.