Andrew S. Tanenbaum is a Professor of Computer Science at Vrije Universiteteit, Amsterdam, the Netherlands. He is a fellow of IEEE and ACM and a member of the Netherlands Royal Academy of Arts and Sciences. He recently won a prestigious European Research Council Advanced Grant of 2.5 million to do research on highly reliable computer systems. Tanenbaum has also authored or coauthored the following titles: Structured Computer Organization, Fifth Edition; Operating Systems: Design and Implementation, Third Edition; and Distributed Systems: Principles and Paradigms, Second Edition, all published by Prentice Hall.
David J. Wetherall is an Associate Professor of Computer Science and Engineering at the University of Washington in Seattle. He hails from Australia and has worked in the area of networking for the past two decades. His research is focused on Internet protocols, wireless networks, and security. Wetherall's work has been recognized with a Sloan Fellowship, the IEEE Bennett Prize, and the ACM SIGCOMM Test-of-Time Award.
Appropriate for Computer Networking or Introduction to Networking courses at both the undergraduate and graduate level in Computer Science, Electrical Engineering, CIS, MIS, and Business Departments.
Tanenbaum takes a structured approach to explaining how networks work from the inside out. He starts with an explanation of the physical layer of networking, computer hardware and transmission systems; then works his way up to network applications. Tanenbaum's in-depth application coverage includes email; the domain name system; the World Wide Web (both client- and server-side); and multimedia (including voice over IP, Internet radio video on demand, video conferencing, and streaming media. Each chapter follows a consistent approach: Tanenbaum presents key principles, then illustrates them utilizing real-world example networks that run through the entire book—the Internet, and wireless networks, including Wireless LANs, broadband wireless and Bluetooth. The Fifth Edition includes a chapter devoted exclusively to network security. The textbook is supplemented by a Solutions Manual, as well as a Website containing PowerPoint slides, art in various forms, and other tools for instruction, including a protocol simulator whereby students can develop and test their own network protocols.
Networking Labs (Instructor bundle)
This set of a dozen labs complements the textbook with hands-on exercises to let students explore the Internet protocols in a real-world setting. All the handouts and traces that students need to complete the exercises are included. The exercises run on Windows, Mac and Linux platforms, and may be used for labs, homeworks, and demonstrations. The protocols that are examined include Ethernet, 802.11, IP, ARP, ICMP, DHCP, UDP, TCP, HTTP, DNS and SSL. The labs also build useful skills by making use of popular networking tools including Wireshark, curl and wget, ping, traceroute, and dig. The instructor version of the labs includes solution handouts and source materials.
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起初在Verycd上看到的电子版,看了一章后实在是受不了了在当当买了一本清华大学出版社的影印版。 自己基础不是很好,后面的习题做的很痛苦,向清华大学索要习题解答的邮件都石沉大海没有音讯。出版社卖出书后就可以不管了吗?
评分大学时的教材里最喜欢的书,没有之一。很少有技术书能让人读的时候像读小说一样不觉得累,同时内容精彩没有啰嗦和废话。大三上这门课时读过一遍,毕业将近5年后又重读了一遍,毕业后积累的很多知识发现书中都有提及到,并且虽然原著作者的写作时间比较早,但书中的内容在互联网...
评分还是英文的好,中文的错误贼多,看到怀疑人生。 啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊 啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊 啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊 啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊啊...
评分第一章看完了,讲解的确实详细,不过感觉看的有点累。 后面的物理层首先讲的就是傅立叶级数,伤脑筋啦。物理层、数据链路层、介质访问控制子层、网络层、传输层和应用层,不知道后面是不是很难,要怎么才能看完啊。 这本书竟然比c primer plus(都是入门类书籍~~~)还要厚。 ...
评分读起来非常爽,跟小说一样吸引人,作者的用词很地道恰当,生词量不多,介绍了很多网络设计的思想,告诉我们为什么这么做。 内容很专业,很详实,推荐想学网络的同学以这本作为入门再恰当不过了。 我做LTE空口PDCP协议的,这两天要抓一下FTP下载慢的问题。于是决定看看TCP协议...
又啃了 Tanenbaum 的一本大书!一如既往的脍炙人口!网络安全那一章开的比较快,以后要找机会认真细读。
评分和《自顶向下方法》一样精彩
评分好像他就靠写书就得了图灵奖,同样得题材确实一般都是他写得最好.
评分好像他就靠写书就得了图灵奖,同样得题材确实一般都是他写得最好.
评分看完top down 看这本down up,补了物理层,对network终于有了mental picture。好书
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