There are several computers in the Macintosh range from the Mac Mini to the Mac Pro. What ports you have depends on the type of Mac you have but they will have ports such as:
Gigabit Ethernet port
Mini DisplayPort
Audio in/out
SD card slot
FireWire 800 port
USB 2.0 ports
Optical digital audio input and output TOSLINK ports
Analog stereo line-level input and output minijacks
Mac ports can not be purchased, however information on configuriing ports on a Mac computer can be found on the official Apple support website. There is also a website called MacPorts, which provides information on Mac port files.
USB ports, unlikely. Mac OS X, no this is impossible as the iPad is not a Macintosh.
at the prompt type in... show iparp It will print off a list of MAC, IP address, and ports.
All the Macintosh range of computers have USB 2 ports.
There are some older ports to mac of winamp, but those are mostly for earlier mac OSs like 8 or 9, maybe even 7, but none that are for OS X, I believe.
to determine which ports are not correctly configured to prevent MAC address flooding
The Mac Pro has two Ethernet ports so that two Ethernet cables can be connected to the computer. The cables may be connecting a local network or peripheral devices such as printers or cameras that require an Ethernet connection.
Check the Apple website, or download MacTracker for concise info.
The switch keeps track of which computers (identified through their MAC addresses) are connected to which switch ports.The switch keeps track of which computers (identified through their MAC addresses) are connected to which switch ports.The switch keeps track of which computers (identified through their MAC addresses) are connected to which switch ports.The switch keeps track of which computers (identified through their MAC addresses) are connected to which switch ports.
Maybe, Yes! Because Mac OS X Snow Leopard has USB Ports. So you can plugged in the mouse in it.
It duplicates the frame to all Ethernet ports, except the port it came from. A switch's MAC table is built not from destination addresses it receives, but by the source MAC addresses. So the frame is broadcast throughout the broadcast domain, until the end device with a matching MAC address responds to the broadcast, thus giving the switch a new source address to add to its MAC table.
No. Hubs simply repeat all the Ethernet frames on all ports and do not interfere with the source or destination MAC addresses and as such do not need their own MAC address.