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172.16.200.18
This is MAC Address comprising of 48 bits (six blocks of double digit hexadecimal numbers)
mac address, physical .address address book ,physical change
No, MAC Addresses are fixed per network interface card or NIC. The MAC address is the Media Access Control address and is the hardware address of the network device to which your IP address, e.g. 192.168.1.3 is assigned. You can identify the vendor of your network card from its MAC address, e.g. all Intel NIC cards may begin with 00-15.
Address in a private range will not be routed on the internet backbone
One way is by the (MAC address). It is a unique identifier assigned to most network adapters or network interface cards (NICs) by the manufacturer for identification.
MAC address :)
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.
The last 64 bits of an IPv6 IP address is called the Interface ID. These last 64 bits are used to uniquely identify an interface on the local link.
That is called a MAC address.
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.
if by co you mean computer then yes you go to command prompt and type in "ipconfig/all" and you go to "network interface(or whatever it calls your nic)" and it will show u the physical address of your nic