Although I see you point, it doesn't matter who has agreed on what, if Cisco
puts it on the exam a certain way, that's what you would need to learn.  =)

About the only time it comes up is when they give you a RIF and ask you to
decipher the 4 fields in the RC.....

All of the study guides, practice exams, etc all use the same references it
seems that you (Reza) already have.....

Mike W.


"Priscilla Oppenheimer"  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> I doubt you really have to know them anyway. It would be really silly if
> you did since there's actually no agreement on them. The numbers that got
> standardized in IEEE 802.1D Annex C don't agree with what IBM was already
> using and what many vendors still use.
>
> Priscilla
>
> At 02:11 AM 5/6/02, Sergei G. wrote:
> >there is no formula. However, you may remember, and should, with real
life
> >associations:
> >
> >a.. 000: 516 bytes (DDN 1822)
> >
> >
> >a.. 001: 1500 bytes (Ethernet)
> >
> >
> >a.. 010: 2052 bytes
> >
> >
> >a.. 011: 4472 bytes (Token Ring, and Cisco maximum)
> >
> >--
> >baba
> >""Phil Barker""  wrote in message
> >[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> > > You have to remember them.
> > > Phil.
> > >   "Sharifi, Reza"  wrote: Hi,
> > > Can any body tell me is there is formula to figure out the maximum
frame
> > > size in a RIF packet, or do I have to memorize all these numbers?.
> > > Thanks
> > > 000 516
> > > 001 1500
> > > 010 2052
> > > 011 4472
> > > Do You Yahoo!?
> > > Get personalised at My Yahoo!.
> ________________________
>
> Priscilla Oppenheimer
> http://www.priscilla.com




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