Basically host name resolution is done by a DNS server/hosts. Host name resolution resolves the names of TCP/IP resources that do not connect through the NetBIOS interface. The most common example of this is a Web browser such as Microsoft Internet Explorer. Other examples include Internet applications such as Ping, FTP, and Telnet. Many modern database and mail applications that connect using Winsock, the Microsoft Windows implementation of TCP/IP sockets, also use host name resolution. Examples of these types of applications are Outlook and Exchange.
NetBIOS name resolution is the process of successfully mapping a NetBIOS name to an IP address. NetBIOS can send a query broadcast out to resolve a name, but this is terribly inefficient. This is done via the NetBEUI Protocol in Windows.
James Collins
Field Service Engineer
A+, MCP
email: butchrecon@skyenet.net
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