An introduction to the basic structure and operation of computer networks explains and illustrates the underlying technology of networks and covers such topics as e-mail, the Internet, and security.
The first part of this book is very good, where it gives some historical information about early telephone and telegraph systems. Unfortunately, it goes downhill a bit after that. In particular, it doesn't even mention the 7-layer OSI model, which seems like quite a glaring omission!
I think this book suffers from the series format: there are some chapters where the diagrams don't really add anything to the description, so it would be better just to have text.
There are some technical errors, e.g. the book doesn't distinguish between RJ45 and 8P8C. Also, some chapters are so light that they're pointless. For instance, chapter 30 covers the World Wide Web, but it just offers an inadequate explanation of what websites are; if you've used the web then you know this already and if you haven't then you won't be able to visualise it just from this description. There's no deeper detail, e.g. a sample of HTML code, to tell you how it actually works, which is supposed to be the whole point of this book!
This was laying around at the office, so I took it home and read it. I'm not strong on networking and I figured this would provide a decent overview.
It did, even though it's seven years old as of this writing, which is ancient in tech years. In fact, it was actually too broad. I wanted more depth and actual technical details than I got. But I do have a better idea now of how things generally work.
The format is each chapter leads off with some text, followed by diagrams to illustrate the concepts discussed. This works well for simpler ideas, but it breaks down a bit for more complex topics and leads to oversimplification.
All in all, not a waste of time, but I probably could have sought out something better.