Is this some kinda weird ass gatekeeping-esque computer geek thing? What you said is so wrong it’s not even funny.
Comment on I’m about to throw my entire Pihole out the window
scott@lem.free.as 1 year agoIf you’re a computer geek (even a professional one) and struggle with IP addressing, you won’t be having much of a career.
griefreeze@lemmy.world 1 year ago
scott@lem.free.as 1 year ago
I’m not gate-keeping. I’m simply suggesting that IP addressing is one of the less-complicated things when it comes to computer-geekery.
griefreeze@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Nah you’re literally gatekeeping what it means to be a computer geek.
scott@lem.free.as 1 year ago
I’m wrong? You’re saying that IP addressing is one of the most complicated things about computers/networking?
gingersneak@lemmy.world 1 year ago
LMAO I know a whole bunch of people who don’t know a subnet mask from a hole in their ass and they’re doing just fine in their IT careers. You are overestimating the requirements for a great many corporate jobs.
PerogiBoi@lemmy.ca 1 year ago
Ya it’s me I’m the guy in IT who is currently confusing a subnet mask for my own ass.
lightnegative@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Just think of it as a routing optimisation that is only relevant for ipv4 networks.
Router simple, router need to make decisions quick, quickest decision is made when can smush the subnet mask against an IP address and determine if the computer is on a local network so router can send traffic direct or is on other network so router needs to send traffic to other router
scott@lem.free.as 1 year ago
There’s a difference between corporate IT and being a computer geek.
I agree that many IT careers are relatively simple support jobs.
OP mentioned computer geeks, which implies to me, people who are deep into computers. In that light, if you’re struggling with concepts of IP addressing then the more-complicated facets of computers and networks will preclude you from an engineering role.