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APIPA addresses are in the range 169.254.0.1 through 169.254.255.254. These would be in the Class B address range.
License? Where do you get this? In a Class B network there are 2 to the 16th power addresses. Class B = 255.255.0.0 65536 addresses In a Class A network there are 2 to the 24th power addresses Class A = 255.0.0.0 16,777,216 addresses In a class C network there are 2 to the 8th power addresses Class C = 255.255.255.0 256 addresses Class A around 16 million Class B around 65,000 Class C is actually 254 NOT 256. IP addresses are leased and therefore the lessee is given a license to use that particular IP address.
A class B address range is all the addresses that start with binary 10, or decimal 128-192. As originally defined, the first two bytes (octets) indicate the network; the last two bytes are reserved for the host. That is, a class B network has about 65,000 available addresses.
Classful addresses are no longer given out. Traditionally, this would require a Class B network, since it has a large enough range. A Class C network only has 256 addresses, but two adjacent Class C addresses would also work.Classful addresses are no longer given out. Traditionally, this would require a Class B network, since it has a large enough range. A Class C network only has 256 addresses, but two adjacent Class C addresses would also work.Classful addresses are no longer given out. Traditionally, this would require a Class B network, since it has a large enough range. A Class C network only has 256 addresses, but two adjacent Class C addresses would also work.Classful addresses are no longer given out. Traditionally, this would require a Class B network, since it has a large enough range. A Class C network only has 256 addresses, but two adjacent Class C addresses would also work.
There are five IP classes that IP addresses are divided into. The IP address 185 is a class B address. Class B IP addresses have the first three numbers of 128 to 191.
True
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A classful class B network has a network range of 128 - 191. For host addresses, anything that is legal for an IP address in the last 2 octets would be a valid host address for a class B with no subnets.
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mean sing of man who can do something.
Class B - 128 - 191
Nothing (0). Anyone can use a private class A or B address in their network because the packets with those addresses are not routed.