About this Training Energy insurance is a type of insurance designed to protect businesses that work in the energy industry. This type of insurance covers a wide range of risks that are unique to the energy industry, such as damage to oil rigs, power plants, pipelines, or other energy infrastructure, as well as accidents, explosions, fires, and environmental damage. Energy insurance can also provide coverage for business interruption caused by unforeseen events that can disrupt energy production or supply, such as natural disasters, equipment breakdown, and cyber-attacks. It may also include coverage for liability and loss of income resulting from lawsuits and legal claims. Training Objectives Upon completion of this course, participants will be able to: Understand the risk sharing between oil companies and contractors Know how this is dealt within the insurance products available Understand insurer's perception of risk Create awareness of how market insurance products meet industry needs Be familiar with insurer's pricing methodologies Better understanding of the broker interface Understand technical evaluation of the coverage wordings Putting technical knowledge into practice with claims workshop Target Audience The course is intended for individuals who work in the energy industry, particularly those who are involved in managing risk or making decisions related to insurance coverage. The following personnel will benefit from the knowledge shared in this course: Insurers Brokers Adjusters Lawyers Risk Managers Treasury Contracts Legals Contract Adjustor Project Managers Course Level Basic or Foundation Trainer Your expert course leader has worked in the insurance sector for 59 years. He has worked as a broker for reputable firms, such as Marsh, where he served as the managing director of Energy Construction. He has also participated in peer review for different Lloyds Syndicates. He also served as a broker for Sedgwick, AAA, and Miller in the offshore energy sector. He has helped businesses including Shell, BP, Chevron, ConocoPhillips, Petrofina, Woodside, ENI, and Brunei Shell for their policy reviews during his career. POST TRAINING COACHING SUPPORT (OPTIONAL) To further optimise your learning experience from our courses, we also offer individualized 'One to One' coaching support for 2 hours post training. We can help improve your competence in your chosen area of interest, based on your learning needs and available hours. This is a great opportunity to improve your capability and confidence in a particular area of expertise. It will be delivered over a secure video conference call by one of our senior trainers. They will work with you to create a tailor-made coaching program that will help you achieve your goals faster. Request for further information post training support and fees applicable Accreditions And Affliations
DNS training course description This three-day hands on DNS training course studies both the UNIX BIND and the Microsoft (MS DNS) implementations. The course starts with the big picture of how DNS works, then client configuration. Primary and secondary servers are then configured, progressing to DDNS, subdomains and security issues. Hands on sessions follow all sections ensuring that troubleshooting techniques are used throughout the course. Students choose whether to use Windows or UNIX for the hands on sessions. What will you learn Describe the architecture of DNS. Explain how DNS works. Install, configure, maintain and troubleshoot DNS DNS training course details Who will benefit: Technical staff wanting to learn DNS including: Network personnel System administrators. Prerequisites: UNIX Fundamentals (or Windows knowledge). TCP/IP foundation for engineers. Duration 3 days DNS training course contents What is DNS? Hostnames, Name resolution, host files, host file problems, What is DNS? The DNS namespace, TLDs, gTLDs, registering domains, Nameservers, how DNS works. Hands on Testing DNS servers on the Internet. DNS clients Ways to use DNS, dynamic and static configuration, multiple nameservers, domain name, searchlist, resolution issues, testing the configuration. Hands on Client configuration. DNS server software Implementations, Microsoft, BIND, daemons and services, installation, starting and stopping servers. Hands on Setting up a DNS server. DNS zone files What is a zone, Zone file overview, Forward zones, Reverse zones, Resource records, A records, PTR, CNAME, Root hints, local zone file. BIND and Microsoft configuration. Hands on Server configuration files. NS and applications MX records, Mail server load balancing, SPF, SRV records, VoIP and SRV, Microsoft and SRV, NAPTR. Hands on Testing records with dig and nslookup. DNS slaves and other servers DNS server types, Server resilience, Slaves, Zone transfers, SOA records, Serial numbers, recommendations, polling based zone transfers, NOTIFY, AD integration, DNS caching, Negative caching, TTL, Caching only servers. Hands on Masters, slaves and zone transfers. The DNS protocol The DNS stack, DNS port numbers, DNS queries, The DNS header, header section format, question format, other section format. Hands on Troubleshooting DNS with Wireshark. Dynamic DNS DHCP, DDNS, IXFR, WINS integration. Hands on Dynamic DNS. Subdomains Root servers, root server selection, Authority, delegation, NS records, subdomain with and without delegation, reverse delegation. Hands on Delegation, setting up a subdomain server. DNS security Restricting queries, DNS and firewalls, Split DNS, forwarders, internal root servers, the use of proxy servers, DNSSEC, TSIG. Hands on Hardening a DNS server. DNS and IPv6 What is IPv6, IPv6 addressing, IPv6 DNS issues, AAAA, IPv6 reverse delegation. Troubleshooting DNS Problem solving, DNS troubleshooting, Zone file checking, Some common errors, Log files, tools, nslookup, dig, host, DNS design, performance, load balancing. Hands on Putting it all together. Summary Useful books, Internet sites, RFCs. Appendix: ENUM What is ENUM, How ENUM works, NAPTR.
Business Networking 1 Day Training in Lincoln