All devices on your network segment. NOTE: In dotted decimal notation, which is the most common way of expressing IP addresses to make them easy for humans to read, this would be 255.255.255.255 or what is commonly referred to as all ones.
That means, all the computers on the local network.
That means, all the computers on the local network.
That means, all the computers on the local network.
That means, all the computers on the local network.
You can send data on an IPv4 network via the 11111111 11111111 11111111 11111111 IP address. With this, you will be transmitting data to all the devices on your network segment.
That means, all the computers on the local network.
All devices on your network segment
All devices on your network segment. This is the 255.255.255.255 address which is reserved for broadcast transmissions. pg 147
Assuming you mean in IPv4, then it's the broadcast address meaning all devices on the network segment should listen to and accept the packet.
The Physical Address
Yes, all devices on a network must have a unique IP address or you will have an IP conflict and one of the devices will have its network connection disabled.
MAC (Media Access Control) address.
Arp (address resolution protocol)
the ip address 172.0.0.2 is the address private in a localhost who you can assign to devices such as routers, computers ... depending on the network configuration
yes
10.0.0.0
Your physical address is the MAC (Media Access Control) address that is burned into the network interface card (NIC). That address is unique and is used to find devices within a LAN.
The highest usable IP address for non-multicast devices is 223.255.255.254 The highest usable multicast IP address is 239.255.255.254
All devices that are reachable