This cannot be done, the MAC address is set in the hardware at the factory to a unique value that no other network device has anywhere in the world and cannot be changed.
from the PC MAC Address.
The MAC address is the serial number of the network card. This number is unique in the world, and there is no need to change it.The MAC address is the serial number of the network card. This number is unique in the world, and there is no need to change it.The MAC address is the serial number of the network card. This number is unique in the world, and there is no need to change it.The MAC address is the serial number of the network card. This number is unique in the world, and there is no need to change it.
The MAC address is the LAN/Ethernet card address there is no specfic Mac address for active directoy. Each server/PC in the world has its own unique mac address.
no it depends
A PC is a Personal Computer. A Mac is a personal computer. A Mac is a PC. A Mac with an Intel processor can run the Windows operating system (or Linux or many others) if needed.
There is no reason to change a MaC address, only possible answer is if you have commited a criminal offence in IT, such a hacking and want to change your MaC address. Please feel free to correct me, IT is such a large field and can change everyday
The recommended operating system for the Asus Eee PC 900 is Windows 8. As such, you can find the MAC address by launching command prompt and typing â??ipconfig /allâ?? without the quotes and hitting enter. The MAC address will be listed next to Physical Address.
You can't. The MAC address is a permanant part of the device.
On a hub network:The host (PC-A) computer sends the frame out its Network Interface Card (NIC) to Fast-Ethernet 0/1 (F0/1) on the HUB. The HUB then sends that frame out every interface (except incoming interface). If the destination MAC address is aaa.bbb.ccc, and PC-B has MAC address aaa.aaa.bbb, then PC-B's NIC will ignore the frame and nothing else will happen.
Simply type "ipconfig /all" This will list detailed information (to include MAC address) of all networking adapters installed on your PC.
Provide a unique logical address for each device on the network. Each networked device has a globally unique physical address, commonly referred to as the MAC-ID.While the MAC-ID is guaranteed to be globally unique, it refers to a particular hardware, not to a particular device. For example, your PC's Ethernet MAC-ID will change when the LAN card changes, but its logical address (the IP address) may not have to change at the same time. This allows other devices to continue communicating with your PC even after its MAC-ID changed.IP addresses are also grouped into subnets, which supports routing. It messages were sent using MAC-ID (physical) addressing, the message must be repeated into every subnet because the destination device could be anywhere.
you usually don't.