No. ISP means "internet service provider."
This can vary depending on your type of service, but generally your modem (usually supplied by your ISP) would act as the connection between your ISP and your LAN.
ISP as in Internet service provider? Most of them do not host websites such as IVC Telecom
IGRP is Interior Gateway Routing Protocol, enhanced by Cisco proprietary Enhanced IGRP.
email is an electronic mail through which you can send messages or an attachment to one or more people. ISP is the Internet Service Provider.
Internet Service Provider
No. ISP means "Internet service provider."
Actually there is IP address(internet protocol address) and ISP (Internet service provider) to see your ip address and isp click on related link, and wait till it fully loaded
BGP border gateway protocol is the most commoly use exterior gateway protocol. EGP are used by ISP's and are being routed from a private network to the internet and to its destination private network.
Is a tunneling protocol used to support virtual private networks (VPNs) or as part of the delivery of services by ISPs. It does not provide any encryption or confidentiality by itself; it relies on an encryption protocol that it passes within the tunnel to provide privacy. It's also carry common protocol to encapsulation process Point - to - point (PPP). L2TP does not provide confidentiality or strong authentication by itself. L2TP requires that the ISP's routers support the protocol. The L2TP protocol is primarily used to integrate multi-protocol dial-up services into an existing ISP point of presence. The protocol is commonly used for reselling ADSL endpoint and cable network connectivity by sitting between the end-user and the ISP. As a result, the reselling cable provider does not appear to be the one doing the transport.
BGP is always used as the routing protocol of choice between ISPs (external BGP) but also as the core routing protocol within large ISP networks (internal BGP).
Your ISP usually gives you a DHCP address, meaning "Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol"; it means that your IP address can change. An unchanging address would be called a Static IP.
A modem only transmits the data, the computer uses a protocol to connect to the ISP. Different types of protocol exist, but I think you're probably thinking of FTP - File Transfer Protocol. If the modem is used to connect to an ISP for an internet connection, than the standard internet protocols and utilities can be used for file transfer. They include ftp, sftp, http and the wget command. If the modem is used to establish a serial connection such as a terminal emulation session, protocols like kermit and xmodem/ymodem/zmodem should be available that perform errorfree file transfers.
Perhaps you mean the "passive-interface" command in Cisco routers; what this does is that no information related to the routing protocol will be sent through the specified interface. For example, the interface that connects your network to the ISP should not carry any routing protocol information, since the routing protocol is only useful within your company's network.
The below steps are to network administrator of an upper-tier ISP can implement policy when configuring BGP: Let us assume Assumethe three ISPs such as ISP A, ISP B and ISP C. Take ISP B does not carry between ISP A and ISP C. Then ISP A and ISP C have ISP B as their BGP peers ISP B does not promote to ISP A, which authorization through ISP C.
Post Office Protocol, also known as POP allows the retrieval of mail from an ISP and to delete it from the server, ask if new mail has arrived and view a few lines of the new email to see if it's worth retrieving.
When you access a website, it gets your IP (Internet Protocol) address. An IP address is tagged to an ISP which is geography specific. So the website knows from where you are accessing.
An allocated IP (Internet Protocol) address is the IP address your ISP (Internet Service Provider) gives you. When you connect to the Internet, this is what you use to connect to websites and is also a unique identifier (although it changes every so often, unless your ISP gives you a static IP rather than dynamic).