A company with a class A address was either one of the very earliest adopters of the network technology or was part of the original network research. Of course, networks that required many clients would be part of that group as well.
Some universities have a class A, and companies such as IBM, and of course the government (which isn't really a company). Some ISPs may have a class A, as well as providers of backbone internet technology, such as the DNS root level servers.
security
1.) List three companies that have a class A IP address license? A. BBN Planet, MA (NET-SATNET) B. AT&T (NET-ATT) C. US Cable Networks c. us cable networks
Class B. The first octet of a Class B license is a number between 128 and 191.
Class B, if you are referring to classful addressing schemes.
192.168.0.254 is a valid "class C" IP address.
There are five IP classes that IP addresses are divided into. The IP address 185 is a class B address. Class B IP addresses have the first three numbers of 128 to 191.
Large organisations that can use around 65000 ip addresses however they will usually waste around 75% of these
The offset for a Class C IP address is 24 bits.
The First Octet is used to derive the Class of an IP address...... Eg: 192.168.1.1------ The IP class for this IP add is CLASS "C" as the first Octet is 192.
Class a
Class C address
License? Where do you get this? In a Class B network there are 2 to the 16th power addresses. Class B = 255.255.0.0 65536 addresses In a Class A network there are 2 to the 24th power addresses Class A = 255.0.0.0 16,777,216 addresses In a class C network there are 2 to the 8th power addresses Class C = 255.255.255.0 256 addresses Class A around 16 million Class B around 65,000 Class C is actually 254 NOT 256. IP addresses are leased and therefore the lessee is given a license to use that particular IP address.