Diagramming A Home Network
Diagramming your home network can be beneficial in various ways. It can help you determine what equipment to include and is present on your network. Diagramming your network can help determine the best layout for your equipment- for example, the best placement of your wireless router. It can be helpful to keep track of equipment and who is the primary user of the equipment--labeling who the devices belong to on a home network diagram can be very helpful for inventory and tracking purposes. Diagramming a home network can help you plan for potential changes you make to your network.
Home networks vary. Some rely heavily on Wi-Fi, and others primarily use hard-wired connections and little to no Wi-Fi. Some home networks use a cable modem to connect to the ISP (Internet service provider), while others may use a DSL modem. Fiber optics is becoming popular for a home network connection to the ISP. Whatever the case, the type of connection to your ISP will often determine things like the type of modem, router, and network cabling your home network will need. These characteristics, networking equipment, and items such as PCs, laptops, and IoT devices should all be documented on a network diagram.
You will use the information at this link to complete the discussion for this week. Make Use of: Home Network Setup Diagram https://www.makeuseof.com/home-network-setup-diagrams/
Answer the following:
Which of the six network diagram examples most closely represent your home network? What would you need to add/remove with this diagram to represent your home network?
What kind of labeling scheme would you use for your home network for each device? Provide an example of your naming scheme and discuss why you chose your naming scheme.
Choose and discuss the pros and cons listed for one of the example network setups. Do you agree with the pros and cons listed? Why or why not? What other pros and cons would you add and why?
al aspect it can be seen that in organic amnesia the memory disorder seems to preserve personal identity, basic semantic knowledge and procedural skills, while psychogenic amnesia includes the loss of personal identity and very basic semantic and procedural abilities (Serra, Fadda, Buccione, Caltagirone, and Carlesimo, 2007). In the neuroradiological sense, organic amnesia seems to have a physical cause that is consistent with cerebral damage affecting cortical and/or subcortical areas known to be important in memory, while in psychogenic amnesia damage to the cerebral areas important in memory does not have a clinical or neuroradiological basis (Serra, Fadda, Buccione, Caltagirone, and Carlesimo, 2007). Looking at the neuropsychological aspect it is easy to see that in organic amnesia there is documented impairment in declarative episodic memory with preservation of other memory functions and general intelligence, while in psychogenic amnesia declarative episodic memory is affected along with general intellectual dysfunction (Serra, Fadda, Buccione, Caltagirone, and Carlesimo, 2007). In the psychopathological sense, organic amnesia shows no predisposing psychiatric conditions before the onset of the condition, while in psychogenic amnesia a psychopathological condition is existent before the onset of the condition (Serra, Fadda, Buccione, Caltagirone, and Carlesimo, 2007). Although psychogenic and organic amnesia are on opposite sides of the same spectrum it is easy to see that they revolve around the same concepts.
Regardless of what type of amnesia a patient may have it all has to start somewhere. The cause of amnesia seems to have a wide range and is unique to each patient. It can range from a traumatic event in psychogenic amnesia to traumatic brain injury in organic amnesia. In one article it was outlined that amnesia could be caused by various circumstances including aneurysms, anoxia, cerebrovascular accidents, herpes simplex encephalitis, and even Wernicke-Korasakoff syndrome in the case of organic amnesia (Duff, Wszalek, Tranel, and Cohen, 2008). Another article even mentions how amnesia in various patients have been caused by fencing accidents, bilateral lesions, car accidents, and even lesions of other cortical areas (Siegert and Warrington, 1996). It has also been documented that psychological trauma can trigger the onset of amnesia in a psychogenic sense. In this case the fear of not being able to pay a friend back on an agreed date lead to the loss of memory for a 38-year-old man in which he was unable to remember any event after that date (Kumar, Rao, Sunny, and Gangadhar, 2007). It was later found that he had no evidence of brain injury, but showed psychological stress immediately before his problems revealed itself (Kumar, Rao, Sunny, and Gangadhar, 2007). Moving forward into various case studies and the depiction of Anterograde Amnesia in Before I Go To Sleep, it is important to understand all of the topics encompassed in amnesia that has been discussed.