Office Networks

 Office Networks

Main office (Head Office) and Branch Office Networks


A computer network can be too small, connecting two computers back-to-back or it can be too large, connecting all devices in a huge enterprise network. In an enterprise network, data originates and travels in different environments like Main Office (Head Office), Remote Locations (Branch Offices, Users working from their home, travelling employees etc).


Main Office (Head Office):


A Main Office (Head Office) is where all the branch offices are reporting to and where the top departmental heads of the enterprise works. Main Office (Head Office) network is where the branch office networks are normally connected to. Normally, it is inside the main office that the most important Enterprise Servers run.


Remote locations include Branch offices, Home Users and Travelling employees.


Branch offices:


Branch offices are normally located in remote geographical locations, connected to the main office by Wide Area Network (WAN). Branch offices normally contain fewer users (employees) than the Main Office (Head Office) and the network resources in Branch Office are limited to the users in Branch Office. Branch offices normally host less important servers.


Home Users:


Home Users are the employee users who work from home. Home users are normally connected to the Main Office (Head Office) / Branch Office using VPN (Virtual Private Network) protected broadband internet.


Travelling Employees:


Travelling Employees are usually managers, sales & marketing employees or technical employees who are at a remote location for a business related activity. Travelling Employees are also normally connected to the Main Office (Head Office) / Branch Office using VPN (Virtual Private Network) protected broadband internet.


When we network multiple physical sites (Example, Main Office and all the Branch Offices) using Wide Area Network (WAN) links, three different topologies are commonly used.


1) Hub-and-Spoke Site-to-site Wide Area Network (WAN) Topology

2) Partial-Mesh Site-to-site Wide Area Network (WAN) Topology

3) Full Mesh Site-to-site Wide Area Network (WAN) Topology


Chapter 1 :- Introduction to Computer Networking

Chapter 2 :- What is a Computer Network

Chapter 3 :- Why we need computer networks 

Chapter 4 :- Client Operating Systems

Chapter 5 :- Common Network Application Software 

Chapter 6 :- LAN and WAN

Chapter 7 :- CAN and MAN 

Chapter 8 :- Peer-to-Peer networks and Client-Server networks

Chapter 9 :- Centralized and Distributed Computer Networks

Chapter 10 :- Internetworks, Internet, Intranet and Extranet

Chapter 11 :- What is a Network Protocol

Chapter 12 :- Difference between Proprietary and Standard Protocols

Chapter 13 :- What are RFCs

Chapter 14 :- Organizations which control Internet 

Chapter 15 :- Bus Topology

Chapter 16 :- Star Topology 

Chapter 17 :- Mesh, Ring and Hybrid Topologies

Chapter 18 :- Network Infrastructure Devices and Icons 

Chapter 19 :- Network Hub

Chapter 20 :- Network Bridge

Chapter 21 :- What is a Router 

Chapter 21 :- What is a Firewall

Chapter 22 :- Office Networks 

Chapter 23 :- Hub-and-spoke WAN topology

Chapter 24 :- Partial-Mesh WAN topology

Chapter 25 :- Full-mesh Site-to-site WAN topology 

Chapter 26 :- What is NIC 

Chapter 27 :- Common Network Cable types

Chapter 28 :- Difference between Baseband and Broadband

Chapter 29 :- CSMA/CD, CSMA/CA and Token Passing

Chapter 30 :- LAN Technologies Ethernet 

Chapter 31 :- Ethernet Media Standards 

Chapter 32 :- What is Token Ring 

Chapter 33 :- What is FDDI

Chapter 34 :- IEEE 802 Standards 

Networking Interview Questions :- 1

Networking Interview Questions :- 2

Networking Interview Questions :- 3

Networking Interview Questions :- 4

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