An IP address consists of four octets. Each octet is an 8-bit segment, which can represent a value from 0 to 255. In IPv4, these four octets are typically written in decimal format and separated by dots, such as in the address 192.168.1.1.
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
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.
4
The first two octets of APIPA (Automatic Private IP Addressing) are 169.254. This range is used for automatic addressing when a device cannot obtain an IP address from a DHCP server. The full range of APIPA addresses is from 169.254.0.1 to 169.254.255.254.