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Networking

Computer networking is the scientific and engineering discipline concerned with communication between computer systems. Such communicating computer systems constitute a computer network and these networks generally involve at least two devices capable of being networked with at least one usually being a computer. The devices can be separated by a few meters (e.g. via Bluetooth) or thousands of kilometers (e.g. via the Internet). Computer networking is sometimes considered a sub-discipline of telecommunications, and sometimes of computer science, information technology and computer engineering. Computer networks rely heavily upon the theoretical and practical application of these scientific and engineering disciplines.

 

A computer network is any set of computers or devices connected to each other. Examples of networks are the Internet, a wide area network that is the largest to ever exist, or a small home local area network (LAN) with two computers connected with standard networking cables connecting to a network interface card in each computer.

 

Computers can be connected to a network in a number of way. The most commonly used are standard wireless (wi-fi) networks using something like a router that has wireless functions built in, normally in 802.11b/g or using cables such as CAT5E or fibre optic. This will create a LAN on all computer system using the network.

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Radio Signal Finding — Jim Sinclair

Communication Systems—A. Bruce Carlson, Paul B. Crilly, and Janet Rutledge

Ethernet Networks—by Gilbert Held

Page 2 :-

Internet Routing Architectures (2nd Edition) by Sam Halabi

ISDN Explained—John M. Griffiths

Intrusion Prevention and Active Response—Michael Rash, Angela D. Orebaugh, Graham Clark, and Becky Pinkard

Page 3 :-

Communicating Systems and Networks Traffic and performance—Georges Fiche and Gerard Hebuterne

Deploying IPv6 Networks (Networking Technology) by Ciprian P. Popoviciu, Eric Levy-Abegnoli, and Patrick Grossetete

Page 4 :-

The Scientist & Engineer's Guide to Digital Signal Processing — Steven W. Smith

Design and Validation of Computer Protocols—Gerard J. Holzmann

IP for 3G: Networking Technologies for Mobile Communications—Dave Wisely, Philip Eardley, and Louise Burness

Page 5 :-

 Object Oriented Software Technologies in Telecommunications: From Theory to Practice—by Iakovos Venieris, Fabrizio Zizza, and Thomas Magedanz

McGraw-Hill - Firewall A Complete Guide

MS Press - Microsoft Encyclopedia of Networking—Mitch Tulloch and Ingrid Tulloch

Page 6 :-

Network Programming with WinSock—Pat Bonner

Understanding the Network: A Practical Guide to Internetworking—Michael Martin

OReilly - Building Wireless Community Networks—Rob Flickenger

Page 7 :-

O'Reilly - Ethernet: The Definitive Guide—Charles E Spurgeon

O'Reilly - HTTP: The Definitive Guide—David Gourley and Brian Totty

OReilly - IP Routing—Ravi Malhotra

Page 8 :-

Sybex - Discovering Bluetooth—Michael Miller

Syngress - Bluetooth Application Developers Guide—ennifer Bray, Brian Senese, Gordon McNutt, and Bill Munday

Syngress - Designing a Wireless Network—Jeffrey Wheat, Randy Hiser, Jackie Tucker, and Alicia Neely

Page 9 :-

Syngress - Mission Critical! Internet Security—Bradley Dunsmore, Jeffrey Brown, and Bradley Dunsmore

 

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