There are 2 main IP protocols. In IP version 4, each IP address has 4 octets. In IP version 6, each IP address has 16 octets.If somebody says "IP address" without further qualifications, he probably means IP version 4, since that is the current standard. IP version 6 is the planned future standard.There are 2 main IP protocols. In IP version 4, each IP address has 4 octets. In IP version 6, each IP address has 16 octets.If somebody says "IP address" without further qualifications, he probably means IP version 4, since that is the current standard. IP version 6 is the planned future standard.There are 2 main IP protocols. In IP version 4, each IP address has 4 octets. In IP version 6, each IP address has 16 octets.If somebody says "IP address" without further qualifications, he probably means IP version 4, since that is the current standard. IP version 6 is the planned future standard.There are 2 main IP protocols. In IP version 4, each IP address has 4 octets. In IP version 6, each IP address has 16 octets.If somebody says "IP address" without further qualifications, he probably means IP version 4, since that is the current standard. IP version 6 is the planned future standard.
24 bits (8 bits per octet, so 3) are used for the network portion of a class C IP address
no
Octets.
No, because first three octets are suppose to be same and they are not.
255
network
4
The four octets make up a complete address. The first part refers to a network, the remainder an individual computer in a host; however, the exact size of this "first part" may vary.
An IP address consists of 4 octets (or bytes), of 8 bits each. It is written as pointed decimal, each byte separated from the others by a point, for example: 10.0.5.255.
The IP address 150.0.0.0 is part of the Class B range of IP addresses, which spans from 128.0.0.0 to 191.255.255.255. In this specific address, the first two octets (150.0) indicate the network portion, while the last two octets (0.0) represent the host portion. This means that it can accommodate a large number of hosts within the 150.0.0.0 network.
An "Internet Protocol Address" uniquely identifies a node on the Internet. Some IP address ranges are reserved for LAN use and do not appear on the full Internet WAN, allowing local nodes to actually have the same IP address but not conflict (this increases the number of allowable nodes without having to expand the size of an IP address). The original IP address was defined to be 4 bytes (octets) long, however the Internet eventually outgrew this and an alternate expanded IP address defined to be 6 bytes (octets) was defined to support the new nodes.