go to command prompt n type
ipconfig /all
MAC address :)
The general rule in networking is that the network id cannot be all zeroes or all ones, and the host id cannot be all zeroes or all ones. The all zero address results in a reserved address meaning "this network". The all ones address is a broadcast address, and cannot be assigned to a single system.
The IP address of course! Think about it. It's on the network layer, It is unique, and it's assigned to every device on the internet!
h
Hardware address is the MAC address. IPv4 is the IP address. The MAC address is assigned to each network device at the time it's manufactured and does not change. The IP address is manually assigned and can be changed.
What if your company is assigned a network address of 150.50.0.0 you need to create 4 subnets all having access to the internet what is the correct subnet mask for the network
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.
IP addresses are assigned by the network administrator, or ISP. The computer does have to be configured manually to respond to that specific address.
No, end devices cannot have .0 address assigned to them. It loosely refers to the entire network subnet.
Port forwarding
Port forwarding
Broadcast Address