According to Microsoft:
How to use automatic TCP/IP addressing without a DHCP server
"A Windows-based computer that is configured to use DHCP can automatically assign itself an internet Protocol (IP) address if a DHCP server is not available. For example, this could occur on a network without a DHCP server, or on a network if a DHCP server is temporarily down for maintenance."
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169.180.23.5
APIPA addresses are in the range 169.254.0.1 through 169.254.255.254. These would be in the Class B address range.
Usually the systems will be assigned an APIPA address in the range 169.254.x.y in order to use resources in their own LAN. The APIPA configuration can also default to static IP addresses if necessary. If APIPA is not being used then the only way to use the network is to manually assign a static IP address and all of the required settings.
APIPA
FalseEven if your network does not need or use APIPA, leaving it enabled is not necessarily problematic, because APIPA is designed to first check for the presence of a DHCP server and allow the DHCP server to assign addresses. In addition if a computers IP address has been assigned statically, APIPA does not reassign a new address. It only works with clients configured to use DHCP. APIPA can be disabled ,However, by editing the Windows operating system registry.
APIPA - Automatic Private IP Addressing uses a range of addresses 169.254.0.0-169.254.255.255 with a subnet mask of 255.255.0.0. If your address starts with 169.254, there is a good chance you are using APIPA.
Addresses 80 - 87H are assigned to the P0 port
They are static.
URLs are assigned randomly to differently IP addresses. IP addresses are the numbers that identify a person's location online; it gives the general location and device.
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).
Domain name
That means that the DHCP server keeps track of what IP addresses - out of a pool (or set) of addresses - have been assigned. Any time a host (computer or similar) requests an IP address, the DHCP server will assign an available address and mark it, in its memory, as "assigned" so it won't assign the same address to another computer.That means that the DHCP server keeps track of what IP addresses - out of a pool (or set) of addresses - have been assigned. Any time a host (computer or similar) requests an IP address, the DHCP server will assign an available address and mark it, in its memory, as "assigned" so it won't assign the same address to another computer.That means that the DHCP server keeps track of what IP addresses - out of a pool (or set) of addresses - have been assigned. Any time a host (computer or similar) requests an IP address, the DHCP server will assign an available address and mark it, in its memory, as "assigned" so it won't assign the same address to another computer.That means that the DHCP server keeps track of what IP addresses - out of a pool (or set) of addresses - have been assigned. Any time a host (computer or similar) requests an IP address, the DHCP server will assign an available address and mark it, in its memory, as "assigned" so it won't assign the same address to another computer.