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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
This is a unique machine ID, also known as 'Mac Address' in terms of networking.
The mac address is the PHYSICAL address of your network card. Each network card is manufactured with a unique address which distinguishes it from every other network card in the world. If you're using Windows XP, open a command prompt and type: ipconfig /all About half way down you'll see "physical address . . . . . . . . xx-xx-xx-xx-xx-xx" That's your mac address. If you were to look at your network card, that's also the physical address that would be on the label.
The first six digits (first three pairs) of a MAC address identify the card vendor.
MAC layer by OSI model is also known as
OUI
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
OUI
There are a couple other ways to refer to a MAC address. One could use the full name, media access control address, rather than the acronym. A MAC address could also be referred to a UAA, or universally administered address.
Hold the windows key(next to alt) and click r(You can also search for Run) in the RUN window type cmd IN the cmd type ipconfig /all Look for MAC address
Ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff