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Question:

Bridged Connection VS NAT in VMware?

What's the real difference between bridged connection and Nat connection in VMware for instance, why choose one over the otherIn what scenario would you use each?

Answer:

first you have to tell us where you found that photo - it could be from a site about the titanic or its sister ship the olympicthe titanic was one of 3 high-tech built ships, owned and made by the british company specializing in ship making - the White Star Lineit may not be the titanic but its sister shipthe RMS titanic and RMS olympic were twin ships(they probably were)
No it isn't the Tittanic, the super structure is incorrect and it looks like it has only 3 funnels and not 4 Chetak
Hmm, you'd have to be more specificWhat is the sour of this picture? Where did you find it?
NAT is not virtual machine / software specific; it stands for Network Address Translation and means that either a router or some other network device (hardware or software) manages the network (i.eprovides DHCP and possibly DNS service)you have to use this option on your vmware machine setup if you have only a cable network connection and you do not use a router or if your ADSL modem does not provide an NAT service already (which many modern ADSL modems do!) bridged network connection simply means that the vmware machine will get its IP address from the DHCP server that's either provided by your ADSL modem with NAT or by a routerthose are the basics; more complicated hardware or software configurations may occur.

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