Traceroute
traceroute on Unix varieties. tracepath on some Linux versions. tracert or pathping on MS-Windows boxes
When you decide to take a trip, you decide your destination and map out the route you will take to get there. This is how it is with a goal. If you set your goal (destination) and decide how you are going to reach that goal (route), and work to get there, you will achieve that goal.
No, I think she would have taken about three weeks to reach her destination, at cruising speed.
It uses ICMP ECHO requests, aka ping.
Drive straight thru the desert until u reach ur destination
They check the number of hops a packet passes to reach the the destination. The router then uses the route with least number of Hops.
It is used to verify end to end connectivity. Also helps to verify that the network is configured correctly, if you can get the reply, sometimes a reply may not come even if the if packets can reach the other end. That can be confirmed with a trace route. If the other end is reachable you get a reply, if it is out of reach you get a destination host unreachable, and if you can reach it but cannot get a reply you get a timeout.
Can you be more specific? What trade route??
Well it depends proportionally. Yes, traveling by sea is faster than by land. But if the sea route is considerably longer than the land route, the land route may be the quicker option. For example, if you traveled 5 mph by boat and were going 2000 miles to the destination, it would take about 17 days to reach the destination. Now, if you travel 2 mph by land and this route was only 1000 miles, it would take about 21 days to reach the destination. So in this instance, by sea would be faster, though that may not be the case all the time.But to answer the simpler question: Boats are faster than walking.
route
Australia
trade route to Asia