I think you are mixing up two different protocols. IPv6 addresses are not hard coded into your adapter; MAC addresses are. It's totally different. IPv6 addresses are 16 bytes long and MAC addresses are 6 bytes long.
The built-in identifying address coded into a Network Interface Card (NIC) is called a MAC address. It is a unique identifier assigned to the hardware by the manufacturer and is used to identify devices on a network. MAC addresses are typically 48 bits long and are displayed in hexadecimal format.
That is a MAC( Media Access Control ) address. Its the physically assigned hexadecimal address on a Network Interface Card. The first half indicates the manufacturer ID while the other half is the NIC ID
That is a MAC( Media Access Control ) address. Its the physically assigned hexadecimal address on a Network Interface Card. The first half indicates the manufacturer ID while the other half is the NIC ID
No
That is a MAC( Media Access Control ) address. Its the physically assigned hexadecimal address on a Network Interface Card. The first half indicates the manufacturer ID while the other half is the NIC ID
The purpose of SCSI hard drives are to exchange information between separate computers. Whereas, EIDE hard drives addresses a computers interface between its individual hard drive and its storage disks.
Yes
YES
Advanced Host Controller Interface
MAC address is a unique identifier assigned to most network adapters or network interface cards (NICs) by the manufacturer for identification, and used in the media access control protocol sub-layer. If assigned by the manufacturer, a MAC address usually encodes the manufacturer's registered identification number. It may also be known as an Ethernet Hardware Address, hardware address, adapter address, or physical address.
Media Access Control address. This is the hardware/vendor set address of a Network Interface Card. The format is xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx With the first 3 hexadecimal digits specifying the manufacturer. Network routers and switches use this address to control traffic to a Network Interface card, it is often tied to a user assigned IP Address (b.b.b.b, 4 octets, usually decimal, 0-255 each).
Aero