In this video Mike goes through how to use Wireshark display filters and the conversation matrix to identify failed TCP connections and measure the roundtrip delay between the client and the server.
February 12, 2026
from the web: Using Wireshark to analyze TCP SYN/ACKs to find TCP connection failures and latency issues.
In this video Mike goes through how to use Wireshark display filters and the conversation matrix to identify failed TCP connections and measure the roundtrip delay between the client and the server.
February 11, 2026
Who Invited This access-point?
At first glance, a duplicate SSID might seem harmless. Maybe a neighbor named their Wi-Fi the same thing as yours, or someone plugged in a cheap router without telling you. But in practice, this can cause real problems. Client devices can roam to the wrong access point, leading to slow speeds, dropped connections, or users getting kicked off the network for no obvious reason. Worse, if that rogue access point isn’t secured properly, it can become a security risk or even a sneaky man-in-the-middle opportunity.
February 10, 2026
Stanford free AI course - Transformers & LLMs (CME295)
If you’re fascinated by cutting-edge artificial intelligence and want to understand one of the most transformative technologies in modern AI, the Transformers YouTube playlist from Stanford Online is a must-watch resource. This thoughtfully curated playlist brings together videos that dive deep into Transformer architectures — the foundations behind powerful models like GPT and BERT that power natural language understanding and generation today. (YouTube)
What sets this playlist apart is its academic quality combined with accessible explanations. The content is delivered by Stanford educators and researchers, giving you insights directly from one of the world’s leading institutions in AI research. Whether you’re a student, a developer, or simply an enthusiast eager to stay ahead in the AI revolution, these videos break down complex ideas like self-attention and sequence modeling in ways that are both clear and engaging. (YouTube)
February 09, 2026
from the web : Why use a route map for redistribution?
The post explains why using a route-map when redistributing routes between protocols (like RIPv2 into OSPF) is important: without one, a router will redistribute all routes indiscriminately, which can cause routing loops, security issues, or unintended route propagation. A route-map gives fine control over which prefixes are shared and allows modification of route attributes such as metrics, metric types, and tags before redistribution. The article walks through a lab topology where RIPv2 routes from one router are selectively redistributed into an OSPF domain using access lists and a route-map that sets different metrics for specific prefixes, demonstrating the configuration and the resulting routing table.
February 05, 2026
Free Seamless Mult-Computer Control with Deskflow
I tried Deskflow, the open-source keyboard and mouse sharing solution that lets you control multiple computers as one. Whether you’re working across Windows, macOS, Linux, or BSD machines, Deskflow turns your primary computer’s keyboard, mouse, and clipboard into a command center for all nearby systems — all without extra hardware or video switching. It’s like having a software KVM that actually simplified my setup, and love that its open source under the GPL-2.0 license.
Popular post in the past 30 days
-
To celebrate my 10th year on youtube and to thank all those who watch, like, share and subscribe i wanted to give you a gift. 2 years ago...
-
When troubleshooting DHCP problems, one of the biggest challenges is separating the packets you care about from the thousands you don’t. On ...
-
In 2018, the I EEE 802.3bt (PoE++) standard for Power Over Ethernet was approved. It offered more power, allowing devices like high-powered ...
-
I was working at a large network heterogeneous environment and started working on a problem of scanners at field offices being unable to tr...
-
Let’s face it: Wi-Fi technology reads like alphabet soup most of the time, but the folks at The Network DNA take a fun (and gently sarcast...