A device or computer gets their MAC address from their Network Interface Card (or NIC). This is not something that a user is able to change (See discussion as to why you can change your MAC address). However an IP address can be statically assigned to you which means a network administrator has physically typed out what your IP address and subnet mask is. Another way to get an IP address is through Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol, or DHCP as it is most commonly known as.
MAC addresses are flat.
The highest usable IP address for non-multicast devices is 223.255.255.254 The highest usable multicast IP address is 239.255.255.254
An IP address has a consistent and predictable route for traffic coming from the internet. A MAC address is not routable.
The Number that Identifies all computers connected to a Network with Internet Access is called the I.P. Address. If you search Google for "IP Address" it will come up with something that says "Your Public IP Address is ..." (... will be where your IP address is)
Yes. A mac address is assigned to a device at the factory and cannot be altered. In most cases, it is the IP address that is temporary and often changes.
The MAC address for each devices will not change but an IP address can be reused so using the MAC address for filtering means that the device will always be included whereas the device may be blocked if allocated a new IP address which has been blocked by the filter.
MAC address is fixed to the hardware device (for example a network card) and can not be changed. IP address is assignable. The default IP address for a device can be computed by converting the four right-most numbers of the MAC address from hex to decimal.The MAC address refers to the physical address assigned by the Network Interface Card manufacturer. Example - 10.03.d5.f3.45.fc , where are an Internet Protocol address is given to a computer when it gets connected to the network. Its divided into four parts , separated by fullstops.
The Router only has one M.A.C Address and One IP Address But, the Router can have many Connections ( Devices using the network ) That may shoe up as their IP Addresses. But the Router only Has One IP Address
I believe the IP address is the address it connects to via Wi-Fi (wireless internet).
Computers with a specified MAC address can only send and receive information with the IP address it is bound to. To use MAC address binding, you must associate an IP address on the specified interface with a MAC address.
Just search "My Ip Address". Its as easy as that!
802.11 use MAC addresses, which are the same as IP addresses in some networks
When two hosts have the same IP address on a network, it can lead to an IP address conflict, causing connectivity issues for both devices. The Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) is often involved in detecting these conflicts, as it maps IP addresses to MAC addresses. Network administrators typically resolve the conflict by reconfiguring one of the devices to use a unique IP address. Additionally, Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) can help prevent such conflicts by dynamically assigning unique IP addresses to devices on a network.
In a Reverse Address Resolution Protocol (RARP) request, the destination MAC address is typically set to the broadcast address (FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF). This allows the RARP request to be sent to all devices on the local network segment, ensuring that the RARP server, which is responsible for resolving the MAC address to an IP address, can receive the request from any client that needs to determine its IP address.
MAC addresses are flat.
For network devices, it's a MAC address. MAC stands for 'media access control' and it's a unique identifier that's present in all hardware that interfaces with a traditional computer network. The device that manages DHCP (or assigning IP addresses to devices) often asks the devices for their MAC addresses and then gives them an IP address. Usually MAC addresses are written as something like 00:0a:5e:1a:8d:a2 and they use hexidecimal notation (allowed numbers 0-9, and letters A-F).
Use ip\mac scanner: http://trogonsoftware/trogon-mac-scanner.html