In Windows, yes, but it must be done manually.
802.11 use MAC addresses, which are the same as IP addresses in some networks
A switch would record multiple entries for a single switch port in its MAC address table if it does not contain the Mac address of a particular destination in the address table. It will broadcast to all ports besides the port where entry comes from.
Ethernet addresses are 48 bits long - not 32 bits long like IP addresses. Different single network standards have different address lengths. Ethernet addresses are called MAC addresses for other reasons, Media Access Control.
A MAC address is unique to your ethernet card. MAC addresses are used within an Ethernet network to uniquely identify the source and destination of Ethernet frames. ARP (Address Resolution Protocol) is used on IP networks to map IP addresses to MAC addresses within an Ethernet network.
Address Resolution Protocol (ARP)ARP is primarily used to translate IP Addresses to Ethernet MAC Addresses.
ARP, or Address Resolution Protocol, defined by RFC 826.
This 48-bit address space contains potentially 248 or 281,474,976,710,656 possible MAC addresses.
You can enable MAC address (also know as Physical Address) filtering. MAC address filtering has two modes: 1. Allow access to listed MAC addresses 2. Deny access to listed MAC addresses.
if the mac addresses are broadcrk securiwoasting the there is no need of net
A flat address space
MAC addresses are flat.
Routers don't use MAC addresses for routing. They use IP address.