answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

It should not cause any problems on the network since the first 24 bits of the MAC addresses are different.

User Avatar

Wiki User

9y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What effect will it have on the network if two devices from two different manufacturers share the last 24 bits of their MAC addresses?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What effect will it have on the network if two devices from two different manufacturer share the last 24 bits of their mac addresses?

It should not cause any problems on the network since the first 24 bits of the MAC addresses are different.


Why is a Network Architecture model useful?

It allows vendors to design products following the model, so different devices from different manufacturers will work together.


How come MAC addresses don't run out -- how do manufacturers know which ones they can reuse?

MAC addresses don't really run out, they get reused, and they distribute to different parts of the world so there is a smaller chance of two addresses being on the same network.


What is the utility used to dynamically assign IP addresses to network devices?

dhcp


What does lpv6 offer?

More unique ip addresses, so essentially more devices on the network.


Which type of network device keeps a table of the MAC addresses of the devices connected to it?

The correct answer is switch.


Why the all zeros and all ones addresses are usually not assigned as host IP addresses?

These addresses are not assigned to devices because they have a reserved meaning. All zeroes refers to "this network", and all ones usually is assigned to a broadcast address (all devices).


What service can configure a server to provide ip addresses automatically to all the computers and other network devices on a particular network?

The DHCP service.


Who is server for dhcp?

It is what... DHCP is designed to automatically distributed IP addresses to connected to the same network devices.


What describes a public network?

Computers that are connected to each other create a network. These networks are often configured with "public" internet Protocol (IP) addresses -- that is, the devices on the network are "visible" to devices outside the network (from the Internet or another network). Networks can also be configured as "private" -- meaning that devices outside the network cannot "see" or communicate directly to them.


What best describes a public network?

Computers that are connected to each other create a network. These networks are often configured with "public" Internet Protocol (IP) addresses -- that is, the devices on the network are "visible" to devices outside the network (from the Internet or another network). Networks can also be configured as "private" -- meaning that devices outside the network cannot "see" or communicate directly to them.


What technology is used to allow or deny traffic over the network based on the physical addresses of the devices?

MAC Filtering