True, they do not exist.
Yes, class distinctions still exist in contemporary society, though they may manifest differently than in the past. Economic inequality, access to education, and social mobility contribute to these distinctions, often influencing opportunities and quality of life. Cultural factors, such as lifestyle choices and social networks, also play a role in reinforcing class divisions. While some progress has been made in addressing these disparities, significant gaps remain.
All ideas of Marxism were violated in the USSR. Classes, money, government, production for sale: all these continued to exist, though Communism means they all disappear.
For no bloody reason!
no you can't use this IP address. you can use IP address belongs to following group only Summary of IP Address Classes Class A - 0nnnnnnn hhhhhhhh hhhhhhhh hhhhhhhh First bit 0; 7 network bits; 24 host bits Initial byte: 0 - 127 126 Class As exist (0 and 127 are reserved) 16,777,214 hosts on each Class A Class B - 10nnnnnn nnnnnnnn hhhhhhhh hhhhhhhh First two bits 10; 14 network bits; 16 host bits Initial byte: 128 - 191 16,384 Class Bs exist 65,532 hosts on each Class B Class C - 110nnnnn nnnnnnnn nnnnnnnn hhhhhhhh First three bits 110; 21 network bits; 8 host bits Initial byte: 192 - 223 2,097,152 Class Cs exist 254 hosts on each Class
The class system certainly did exist at this time and was almost as rigid as, say, the Indian caste system. Society in rural areas, at least, was still almost feudal. The class system is what the play She Stoops to Conquer is all about.
Static Variables are created when the class is loaded and continue to exist as long as the class is loaded/present in the JVM
2
yes
Wan- is wide area network , vpn - is a virtual private network, vpns exist within lans, lan exist within wans.
IPv4 and IPv6 are two different protocols . The two protocols are not compatible with each other. But they can exist in a same network together.No, those are two different protocols. However, they can co-exist in the same network (this is known as "dual stack").No, those are two different protocols. However, they can co-exist in the same network (this is known as "dual stack").No, those are two different protocols. However, they can co-exist in the same network (this is known as "dual stack").No, those are two different protocols. However, they can co-exist in the same network (this is known as "dual stack").
Something that logically can't exist, because as soon as it works, it's a THIS generation network.
Write the class that supposedly "doesn't exist".