Video-first Internet infrastructure education for people who want practical context, not slogans.
This program turns network concepts into explainable building blocks: exchanges, routing, CDNs, peering, infrastructure economics, and the operational context around them.
What is an IXP?
And why is it called the Internet ka chauraha?
In this episode of Internet A–Z, we break down
what an Internet Exchange Point (IXP) really is
and why it plays such a critical role in how the Internet works.
We cover:
– What an IXP (Internet Exchange Point) is
– Where different Internet networks exchange data
– How direct paths reduce latency and cost
– Why video calls and gaming feel smoother with IXPs
– How BGP, peering, and route servers work at an IXP
– The “Three L’s” of IXPs: Latency, Lower Cost, Locality
– How strong local IXPs make the Internet faster and more resilient
This series explains the Internet
not through definitions,
but by peeling its layers one by one.
🗣️ Question for you:
Do you know which IXPs your ISP is connected to?
If not, how would you find out?
Tell us in the comments.
👉 Next episode:
From chaurahas to godowns —
the layer where content is stored close to you.
That layer is called a CDN (Content Delivery Network).
Happy Networking.
In this episode of Internet A–Z, we explore how data actually travels across the Internet.
Learn how data packets move hop-by-hop, how routers make decisions, why the Internet doesn’t choose a “perfect” path, and how speed vs reliability is handled behind the scenes.
This episode builds the foundation for upcoming topics like IP addresses and DNS.
Is episode mein hum samajhte hain ki jab aap ek simple sa click karte ho, to data Internet ke andar kaise move karta hai.
Data packets kya hote hain, routers kaise decisions lete hain, aur Internet kab speed ko priority deta hai aur kab reliability ko.
Agar aap Internet ko sirf use nahi, balki samajhna chahte ho, to Internet A–Z series aapke liye hai.
IP Addresses: How the Internet Identifies Every Device
When you send a message, open a website, or play a video,
your data doesn’t magically reach the right device.
It breaks into packets,
travels through multiple networks,
and still somehow reaches exactly the right destination.
How does the Internet know
where each packet should go?
In this episode of Internet A–Z,
we uncover the concept of IP addresses —
the address system of the Internet.
You’ll learn:
Why every device on the Internet needs an address
How routers use IP addresses to forward data
Why IP addresses change when you switch networks
The difference between IPv4 and IPv6
Why NAT exists for IPv4, and why IPv6 doesn’t normally need it
This episode builds directly on our previous discussion
about how data flows through the Internet,
and sets the foundation for the next episode on DNS —
the Internet’s phonebook.
📌 This series explains the Internet layer by layer,
using mental models instead of definitions.
Next episode: How names like google.com become IP addresses (DNS).
Happy Networking.
Most people describe DNS as “the Internet’s phonebook.”
And that’s not wrong.
But DNS does far more than just convert domain names into IP addresses.
DNS decides:
Which server you connect to
Which location serves your request
What happens if a server fails
How performance and resilience are maintained
In this episode of Internet A–Z, we go beyond the basic definition and understand DNS as the Internet’s control layer.
You’ll learn:
âś” What DNS actually does
âś” The roles of Recursive, Root, TLD, and Authoritative servers
âś” How the 13 logical root servers work
âś” What Anycast means (at a conceptual level)
âś” How TTL and caching improve performance
✔ Why “DNS propagation” is really cache expiry
âś” How DNS works with CDNs to improve resilience
If you want to truly understand how the Internet works — not just use it — this episode builds that foundation.
Next episode:
TCP vs UDP — Reliable vs Fast communication.
Happy Networking.
DNS gives us the address.
Routers show us the path.
But how does data actually travel?
Should it be delivered reliably?
Or as fast as possible?
In this episode of Internet A–Z, we break down the two fundamental transport protocols that power the Internet:
• TCP (Transmission Control Protocol)
• UDP (User Datagram Protocol)
You’ll learn:
What “connection-oriented” really means
How the 3-way handshake works
What retransmission and acknowledgements do
How TCP controls congestion
Why UDP is faster but less strict
When applications choose speed over reliability
What port numbers are and why they matter
By the end of this episode, you’ll clearly understand the difference between TCP and UDP — and how they fit into the Internet’s layered architecture.
Next episode: HTTP vs HTTPS — understanding communication at the application layer.
If you want to truly understand how the Internet works — not just use it — this series is for you.
Happy Networking.
When you see the đź”’ lock icon in your browser, you probably assume the website is safe.
But is it?
In this episode of the Internet A–Z series, we break down the real difference between HTTP and HTTPS — not just at the surface level, but at the architectural level.
You’ll understand:
What HTTP actually is
Why it was never designed for security
How unencrypted traffic can expose usernames and passwords
What HTTPS really means (HTTP over TLS)
How the TLS handshake works conceptually
The difference between encryption and trust
Why HTTPS does NOT guarantee a website is legitimate
We also connect the dots between:
DNS → IP → TCP → TLS → HTTP
So you can finally see how the modern web works as a system.
This episode reinforces everything we’ve covered so far — and prepares you for the final episode:
“Browsers: What Happens After You Press Enter”
If you want to truly understand how the Internet works — not just use it — this one is essential.
Happy Networking.