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Connectivity generally refers to the ability of devices, networks, or systems to establish and maintain a communication link so data can be exchanged. Key points:

  • Types: wired (Ethernet, fiber) and wireless (Wi‑Fi, cellular, Bluetooth).
  • Layers: At a high level, connectivity involves physical links, data-link and network layers (IP routing/DNS), transport (TCP/UDP), and application protocols (HTTP, SSH).
  • Metrics: bandwidth (throughput), latency (delay), jitter (variation in delay), packet loss, and reliability/uptime.
  • Factors affecting connectivity: signal strength/interference, network congestion, misconfigured DNS/firewall, hardware faults, ISP issues, and routing problems.
  • Common tools for diagnosing: ping, traceroute, nslookup/dig, speed tests, network analyzers (Wireshark), and public DNS server tools for resolving name issues.
  • Best practices: use redundant links, monitor performance, secure endpoints, keep firmware updated, and configure DNS and routing correctly.

If you meant a specific context (e.g., mobile connectivity, IoT, or connectivity in software systems), say which and I’ll give a focused explanation.

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